MLR: To Repeal Or Not, That Is The Question
| By Hennosy, Kevin P | |
| Proquest LLC |
New officers and old fights over producer compensation in a human terrarium
The
For example, while The Gaylord National advertises its location as "near
According to sources close to NAIC leadership, attendance numbers at the Gaylord-based meetings has not met obligations under the Weatherford-era contracts. As a result, the NAIC extended the contract with
Once again, the NAIC and its meeting attendees are paying for the mismanagement of
Officers
At the
NAIC President Kevin M. McCarty is the commissioner of the
President-Elect James J. Donelon was appointed Louisiana Insurance Commissioner in
Vice President
Secretary-Treasurer
In the absence of major indictments and/or punitive incarcerations, the NAIC officers advance through the leadership ranks serving one-year terms in a sequential fashion beginning with secretary-treasurer and ending with president.
In his opening address as NAIC President, Commissioner McCarty expressed his devotion to the Anti- Federalist cause, which chooses to look past the Constitution of 1789 and 223 years of American jurisprudence: "Over the next year we must confront several important challenges. Whether it is Dodd-Frank or the Affordable Care Act, the federal government has become increasingly involved in the insurance arena. As your president, I intend to vigorously defend the role of state-based regulation, highlight our accomplishments, and continue to work for regulatory modernization and national uniformity to create an insurance framework that benefits both consumers and the insurance industry."
MLR repeal
In what attendees describe as an otherwise quiet gathering of the NAIC, commissioners and lobbyists engaged in an active effort to reverse Association policy on Medical Loss Ratios (MLR) under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. The MLR as defined by federal law requires health insurers to spend at least
As a point of reference, traditionally private insurers have spent 60% of premiums on claims while retaining 40% on overhead and profits. The
In
These recommendations were consistent with the well-established tenet of Agency Law, which defines agents as an extension of the principal in any contract. In the case of insurance, agents represent the insurance company. In short, insurance companies have agents, not insurance consumers.
Opponents of the MLR as written argued that agent and broker commissions should be accounted for as a consumer benefit, rather than corporate overhead. On
In
Following the task force vote, PIA National Assistant Vice President
Since his days as an insurance department staffer, Commissioner McCarty has earned a reputation for being a dogged advocate for his policy proposals at NAIC. There is little doubt that Commissioner McCarty never would have called the question at the task force he chairs, if he did not support the resolution endorsing HR 1206.
On
One reason why the proponents of the resolution may have adopted a stealth approach to lobbying was consumer groups' ability to generate public response. "When the NAIC took up a similar recommendation, more than 10,000 consumers wrote to their insurance commissioner expressing disappointment and opposing the effort," according to
"This would be a big loss for consumers," said
Furthermore, according to
Consumer groups have long questioned the use of commissions as a means of compensation in insurance sales. The belief is that commission compensation introduces reverse competition into insurance markets: The products with higher commissions, and usually higher prices, are more competitive because producers tend to present and promote the more expensive product.
As noted, the new NAIC president's allegiance to the repeal proposal is not subject to reasonable doubt; however, just prior to the NAIC meeting, trouble arose back home in
On
The call for repeal of the NAIC's policy on MLR is counter to the policy of the
The written challenge to the
The Consumer Watchdog letter alleged, "
The letter questions the validity of a hearing conducted by the
*
* Department officials in that hearing asked only questions that amplified the demand.
* The department record shows no consumer organizations or any other critical voices invited into the process and no non-industry comments recorded.
* The factual material ultimately provided by the Florida DOI fails to support the waiver demand.
Consumer Watchdog challenged this argument using strong language. "The Florida DOI argues, without a shred of evidence, that brokers will quit their businesses or leave
To add insult to injury for the new NAIC president, the consumer group used an NAIC report to counter many of the arguments presented to the
* A thorough study this year of the broker issue, by the
* States that already have MLR requirements near or at the ACA [Affordable Care Act] levels told the NAIC study group they had heard no complaints-not one-that broker assistance was scarce.
* Brokers stand to gain substantial new clients nationwide from the ACA's consumer insurance mandate, and are likely to make up in quantity whatever they may lose in individual commissions. The policy clarity and simplifications required by the ACA will also make both brokers' and consumers' jobs easier.
* The NAIC study found no definitive evidence that insurers are even cutting broker commissions because of the MLR. Some insurers, notably
The hard line taken both by producer groups and consumer groups puts Commissioner McCarty between the proverbial "rock and a hard place." Such is the lot of being NAIC president.
To add insult to injury for the new NAIC president, the consumer group used an NAIC report to counter many of the arguments presented...by the
| Copyright: | (c) 2012 Rough Notes Co., Inc. |
| Wordcount: | 2069 |



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