Center on Budget & Policy Priorities: Entering Their Second Decade, Affordable Care Act Coverage Expansions Have Helped Millions, Provide the Basis for Further Progress
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The Affordable Care Act (ACA) expanded eligibility for affordable health coverage in two main ways: by creating health insurance marketplaces with federal financial assistance that reduces premiums and deductibles and by allowing states to expand Medicaid to adults with household incomes up to 138 percent of the federal poverty level (FPL). Both of these coverage expansions took effect in 2014.[1] As of the end of open enrollment, 21.4 million people have selected an ACA marketplace plan for 2024, and 40 states and the
Looking ahead, federal and state policymakers should maintain and build on these gains, both by continuing to provide expanded financial assistance that lowers the cost of coverage through the ACA marketplaces and by closing the Medicaid coverage gap to ensure people with low incomes have a pathway to affordable coverage in every state.
More People Have Affordable Health Coverage Because of the ACA
Today, roughly 40 million people are enrolled in coverage under the ACA marketplaces and Medicaid expansion.[3] The ACA's coverage expansions drove a precipitous decline in the uninsured rate, which fell and eliminating prior barriers in the private insurance market for people with pre-existing health conditions, the ACA provided new options for many people who lack access to affordable employer-sponsored health benefits. Self-employed people, people who work in industries less likely to offer insurance (like food service and construction), gig and part-time workers, people who retire before they become eligible for Medicare at age 65, people who work at small businesses, and people with low incomes are now more likely to be covered.
Coverage gains have been particularly significant for people of color, who have historically experienced higher uninsured rates due to systemic racism, discrimination in employment and education, and other factors that diminish income and access to employer-based health insurance. Between 2013 and 2022, uninsured rates for people under age 65 dropped from 23.8 percent to 14.1 percent among American Indian and Alaska Native people, from 29.7 percent to 17.8 percent among Latino people, and from 18.7 percent to 9.9 percent among Black people.[4]
Enhanced Premium Tax Credits Significantly Reduce Premiums for ACA Marketplace Enrollees and Have Contributed to Historic Enrollment Levels
Temporary enhancements to premium tax credits (PTCs), originally enacted in the American Rescue Plan in 2021 and extended through 2025 by the Inflation Reduction Act, have reduced ACA marketplace enrollees' premiums by an average of
In
These improvements -- combined with deeper investments in marketing, outreach, enrollment assistance, and simplifications to the enrollment process -- have been a major driver of record growth in marketplace enrollment in recent years.[11] Marketplace affordability enhancements have also been especially critical for increasing enrollment among people of color and people with low incomes. Between 2021 and 2023, marketplace enrollment growth among Black and Latino people in states using the HealthCare.gov platform outpaced other racial and ethnic groups and grew by over 80 percent.[12] Between 2021 and 2023, marketplace enrollment among people with incomes between 100 and 150 percent of the poverty level -- a group able to enroll in a silver-level plan for a
Medicaid Expansion Continues to Lower Uninsured Rates in States That Cover Adults With Low Incomes
The ACA permitted states to expand Medicaid coverage to adults with incomes up to 138 percent of the poverty level (about
Indeed, the 2022
Action Is Needed to Maintain the Momentum of Recent Coverage Gains and Fully Realize the ACA's Potential
If PTC Enhancements Lapse, Premiums Would Increase for All Marketplace Enrollees
Unless
A single individual making
A single individual making
A 60-year-old couple making
A family of four making
As a result of the enhancements, people with incomes above 400 percent of the federal poverty level became newly eligible for PTCs if their marketplace premiums would exceed 8.5 percent of household income. If the PTC enhancements are not extended, the premium increases for people in this group would be dramatic:
A typical 60-year-old couple making
A typical family of four making
While the majority of marketplace enrollees receive PTCs (more than 90 percent in 2023), even enrollees who do not receive PTCs will likely see increased premiums if the PTC enhancements expire. Fewer people would be expected to enroll in marketplace coverage if the enhancements expire, and because of the effect on the risk pool, insurers would be expected to increase rates. When the PTC enhancements were first due to expire at the end of 2022, an analysis from the
Closing the Medicaid Coverage Gap Would Advance Health Equity by Creating a Pathway to Affordable Coverage for More Than 1.6
Action is also needed to create a pathway to affordable coverage for the more than 1.6 million people in the ten non-expansion states who fall into a "coverage gap" and are uninsured. People in the coverage gap have incomes that are too low to qualify for financial help with marketplace coverage under current federal rules, but they also don't qualify for Medicaid in their state because either their income is too high, or they don't fall into an existing eligibility category.[22] (See Table 1.) In non-expansion states, the median income limit for parents to qualify for Medicaid is just 35 percent of the poverty level -- equivalent to
Closing the coverage gap is critical for advancing health equity across racial and ethnic lines; about 65 percent of those in the coverage gap are people of color, most of whom live in the South.[24] (See Figure 4.)
Several states are currently exploring Medicaid expansion. Expanding Medicaid remains a good financial decision for states, with the federal government paying 90 percent of the costs for people who are newly eligible for the expansion. And the Rescue Plan created a large new financial incentive that makes expansion an even better deal for states that haven't expanded. States that expand Medicaid after
Despite clear benefits not only to people who will gain coverage, but also to health care providers and state economies, the last ten years have shown that some states are not likely to adopt the Medicaid expansion. As proposed in
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End Notes
[1] Several states and jurisdictions began implementing full or partial Medicaid expansion prior to
[2]
[3]
[4] CBPP analysis of 2013 and 2022
[5] CMS, "Biden-Harris Administration Launches Window-Shopping Ahead of 11th ACA Marketplace Open Enrollment Period,"
[6] CMS, "Health Insurance Marketplaces 2024 Open Enrollment Report,"
[7] CMS, "Effectuated Enrollment: Early 2023 Snapshot and Full Year 2022 Average,"
[8] The marketplace uses the poverty guidelines, commonly known as the federal poverty level (FPL), in effect at the start of the open enrollment period to determine premium tax credits for the subsequent plan year. All marketplace examples and premium calculations in this report are for the 2024 plan year and therefore use the 2023 FPL. In contrast, Medicaid uses the FPL in effect when a person enrolls. Examples of income levels for Medicaid eligibility therefore use the 2024 FPL.
[9] Before the American Rescue Plan was enacted, people with incomes greater than 400 percent of the FPL were not eligible for PTCs. By setting the upper required contribution percentage at 8.5 percent of income, the Rescue Plan makes some people with incomes greater than 400 percent of the FPL newly eligible for PTCs (if their premiums would exceed 8.5 percent of income).
[10] Deductibles within each plan level did not decrease between 2021 and 2023, but the median individual deductible among plan selections did, suggesting that people selected higher-value plans in 2023. CMS, "2014-2023 OEP Plan Design Public Use File,"
[11] Medicaid and
[12]
[13] CMS, "Marketplace Open Enrollment Period Public Use Files,"
[14] The ACA was supposed to provide Medicaid coverage to all adults with low incomes, but in its NFIB v. Sebelius decision of 2012, the
[15] CMS, Medicaid Enrollment Data Collected Through MBES,
[16]
[17]Laura Harker and
[18]
[19]
[20] CBPP calculations using 2024 benchmark (second-lowest-cost silver tier plan) premiums with age adjustments. Examples are not projections but rather illustrate the magnitude of the shift in costs that typical individuals and families under these scenarios would experience if the PTC enhancements expire. Actual costs will be determined by future premiums, contribution percentages, and other unknown factors. These national estimates are applicable in all states except for a small number that have state-specific poverty levels and/or provide additional premium subsidies. The family of four includes two 40-year-old parents, a 10-year-old, and a 5-year-old. See Appendix Table 2 for state-specific estimates.
[21]
[22] CBPP analysis of 2022
[23] KFF, "State Health Facts: Medicaid Income Eligibility Limits for Adults as a Percent of the Federal Poverty Level,"
[24] CBPP analysis of 2022
[25] The
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Original text here: https://www.cbpp.org/research/health/entering-their-second-decade-affordable-care-act-coverage-expansions-have-helped
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