Blue Cross results trigger rebates
The
Analysts said that
In
"Remember in 2016, they approved premium rate increases between 50 percent and 67 percent for 2017," said
The rebates apply only to people in the individual market, a small slice of the health insurance world primarily for people under age 65 who are self-employed or don't get coverage from their employer. Refunds are not coming for people with Medicare, Medicaid or employer coverage.
On a per-person basis, in fact, medical spending in the individual market declined significantly during 2017, according to a report last week from the
Other insurers threatened to leave the market as a result, regulators said, prompting the state to let competing carriers cap their enrollment for 2017.
"We were the only carrier in the market without a cap," Stich said. "And so, for us, that would have left us with some exposure being the carrier of last choice. There's some uncertainty there -- if no other carrier is able to take an individual, we also have to be able to account for that."
The individual market has been shrinking in
The trade group's report last week showed that carriers in the state were profitable once again in 2017, a reversal from two consecutive years of operating losses. Overall, seven nonprofit health insurers posted combined net income of
Part of the improvement came from the individual market, where carriers saw
"The goal is never to get a 16 percent profit in this marketplace," Banerjee said.
A
Refunds are mandated by the Affordable Care Act, which regulates the share of premium revenue that health insurers must spend on clinical services and quality improvement. The rule, which is similar to an older
"It caps how much they can either keep for profits or for administrative purposes," said
The ACA rule has been prompting rebates since 2011, but there have been relatively few in
Cox said she would not be surprised if other insurers wind up paying rebates for 2017, since the market through the third quarter of last year was showing signs of becoming more profitable for carriers.
"But because losses were so significant in the past couple of years, and because the rebates are based on three-year averages, it's also likely that some insurers that were profitable last year won't owe rebates," Cox said.
Rebates won't be finalized until the summer, and won't be paid to consumers until the fall. It's unclear exactly how much consumers might expect per person.
More than 37,000 people were buying its individual market plans last year, which might imply a payout of roughly
___
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