Redistribution at it's finest Subsidies have boosted Affordable Care Act’s enrollment

Subsidies have boosted Affordable Care Act’s enrollment. It’s setting up a potential fight

by Joseph Choi - 02/18/23 6:00 AM ET

DORCHESTER, MA – APRIL 11: Dr. Elizabeth Maziarka uses a stethoscope during an examination of patient June Mendez at the Codman Square Health Center April 11, 2006 in Dorchester, Massachusetts. Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney is scheduled to sign a health care reform bill April 12 that would make it the first state in the nation to require all its citizens have some form of health insurance. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

Health insurance sign-ups through the Affordable Care Act (ACA) jumped by nearly 2 million during the most recent enrollment period, which ended in mid-January, totaling 16.3 million people.

The gains suggest the program known as Obamacare is going strong, despite repeated efforts by Republicans to kill it.

It also suggests subsidies provided to the program through two massive pieces of legislation spearheaded by President Biden had an influence. The subsidies were established by the American Rescue Plan in 2021 and subsequently extended through the Inflation Reduction Act.

“It really speaks to the improved affordability of ACA Marketplace plans. The expanded subsidies made ACA Marketplace plans a whole lot more affordable and attractive for people,” Krutika Amin, associate director at the Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF), told The Hill.

The potential problem down the road for the Affordable Care Act is that these critical subsidies are set to expire in 2025 and would have to be renewed by Congress in order to continue.

Both the White House and Democrats in Congress have called for the subsidies to be made permanent, but Republicans are likely to oppose those efforts.

That sets up a battle within next year’s race for the White House and the congressional majorities.

Republicans on the House Budget Committee recently proposed cutting these subsidies to help address the nation’s debt. A change like this could impact future enrollment, casting a shadow on the expanded access to health care the Biden administration has included among its hallmark achievements.

In its proposal, the House Budget Committee suggested capping ACA subsidies to 400 percent of the poverty level and below, essentially returning to the original standards set by the ACA. The panel estimated that “recovering overpayments” could save the government $65 billion.

Whether a GOP majority would actually move forward with such a proposal is a real question, say some analysts.

“I’m kind of skeptical about this precisely because this is something that the budget committees do every year. It doesn’t represent necessarily something that the Republican majority would support generally speaking. It’s a starting point for some kind of a discussion,” Joseph Antos, a health policy analyst at the conservative think tank American Enterprise Institute, told The Hill.

Antos noted the Republican Study Committee made no mention of reducing ACA premium subsidies in its proposed alternative budget for 2023, with the plan mostly focusing on regulatory changes to the program.

Ending the subsidies would be a politically fraught endeavor, especially with the program’s expanded use and popularity.

“The old saying is that once you’ve handed somebody an entitlement, you can’t take it back. And that’s what the ACA is,” said Antos. “It’s very difficult for a politician to actually take a cut in anything that directly affects voters. It really doesn’t matter whether you think that the people who are benefiting most are more likely to vote Democrat or Republican. It leaves a bad taste in everybody’s mouth.”

Amin from KFF noted that the income limit for subsidies proposed by House Republicans would set a cutoff at a little over $54,000 in 2023.

“If that does happen, where ACA subsidies are once again capped up to that income level, then some people — particularly middle-income people and older people — will have to pay a lot more for easy marketplace plans,” Amin said.

Amin gave the example of a 60-year-old individual making about $55,000 annually. With the current subsidies, such an individual would pay about 8 1/2 percent of their income for a Silver health plan, a mid-level plan available through the Marketplace.

“If the GOP proposal to cap the subsidies … moves forward, the 60-year-old would have to pay over 20 percent of their income on average in some states,” said Amin.

While he did not touch on this specific proposal, Biden made it clear during his State of the Union address last week he would veto any legislative attempts by Republicans to drastically change the health care landscape, including access to abortion at the federal level and potential cuts to Medicare.

Apart from the subsidies, administration officials and health care stakeholders also attributed the boost in enrollment to concerted efforts on outreach and awareness.

Liberal health care advocacy group Protect our Care cited the administration’s investment into the ACA’s Navigators program as another reason for the increasing enrollment numbers. Navigators are essentially ACA enrollment advisers who are tasked with raising awareness of Marketplace plans and assist consumers in preparing their applications.

“The nation’s uninsured rate is at the lowest it has ever been in history,” Protect our Care said in a statement. “We’re finally starting to reach the true potential of the Affordable Care Act, and you see that reflected in the enrollment numbers. The lesson here is that the American people want us to keep pushing these policies forward until we ensure that everyone has the care they need to thrive.”

A spokesperson for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid (CMS) echoed these sentiments, saying the level of outreach had risen to an “unprecedented scope and scale” this past year.

“Enrollment outreach included investments to reach multiple audiences that experience lower access to health care. CMS has partnered with cultural marketing experts, for example, to deliver strong campaigns to African Americans, Spanish and English-speaking Latinos, and Asian American and Pacific Islander communities in multiple languages,” the spokesperson said.

CMS invested nearly $100 million in grant funding to 59 Navigator organizations for this year’s enrollment period, another record amount according to the agency’s spokesperson.

We back to this monstrosity again of the healthcare debate. It never stops!

1 Like

Interesting as they have no clue as to the cost of the ACA and the off setting tax collected to pay for it.

Eventually one would think that we will run out of other people’s money!

Running out of other people’s money has been bandied about for the last 60 years. I wonder when it actually happens?

When the blood runs dry!

1 Like

The day is coming when the treasury will no longer be able to finance the debt without a risk premium.

That day may be defined when the government requires citizens to have a portion of their retirement funds, IRA, etc in treasuries. The day investors give the treasuries the middle finger ad insist on a risk premium.

1 Like

Could always go back to “greenbacks”! Government should have never been in the business being in debt, when in reality they could issue their own currency such as Fed Notes. The Federal Reserve was the biggest mistake Woodrow made and foisted onto the American public without public consensus. I guess it was intended that way for nefarious reasons, and that list is long with grievances and controversy.

1 Like

Going back to the Gold Standard would be a great start.

Have you ever seen the move “The Secret of Oz”?

No. Should I watch it?

Yes! Absolutely! The best 2 hours you will spend learning about the history of our currency and the evolution of it!

I actually know this guy (Bill Still) Great Patriotic American.

Thanks. I will definitely make time to watch it.

1 Like

If boomers want to live for more than a century, that’s simple: go back to work and earn your right to keep living for so long. If you want a luxury lifestyle—earn it, do not steal it cunningly as you already did for too long

1 Like

LOL… Boomers are the ones keeping this country alive while you young punks sit around and complain about everything. It’s you that want the luxery lifestyle … right out of the gate. You have no idea what it means to earn anything. I get up at 4:00 am every day and go to work by 6: am. I work 8 - 10 hour days. Not a big deal, as I was raised to give an honest day’s work for a day’s pay. You little shits have no work ethic… you feel everything should just be given to you… that you should start out making six figures a year…lol. If my daughters acted like you, I’d slap the shit out them.

You are the lazyest people when it comes to work… and actually earning anything you get / have.

The typical response from an incompetent, feckless Boomer that has spent a lifetime being openly proud to be stupid, as he gaslights the younger generations in his own country that he betrayed and exploits, selfishly trying to cling to his last remaining shed of pride, pathetically engaging in a name-calling match like a spoiled child, yet stuck in the aging and dying body of a 60+ year old. He’s proud to be unemployed and worthless. No better nor more moral than a jungle monkey after just learning how to walk upright in the past millennia. He thinks We should thank him for his “contribution” to history. You have shown your quality before the world.

You sure inspire me to stay in this Nation, start a company, raise a family, contribute to society, and engage in the political process, with you, and those who possess the maturity and communication skills you do, comrade. I am sure I can succeed with a fuck wit like you around. Thanks Boomer.

You are possibly the stupidest person I have ever come across on the internet. What a waste of time. I’m sure your parents are proud. I’m done with you. Come back with whatever you wish… you aren’t worth any more time.

1 Like

Uninformed as always.

2 Likes

I agree I’ve turned down so many pension jobs, I’m in my 40’s … I don’t want it. I want to earn it .

Pussys only take a pension includes the enlisted, you fight for America for free. Not benefits