Premiums declining, steady for plans via MNsure
Statewide, average premium changes for the market's largest carriers in 2018 will range from a 13 percent decrease to an increase of less than 3 percent, the state
"Last year at this time, we had a near-collapse of
But those emergency fixes add some important asterisks to Monday's rate release, which applies to individuals who buy via agents and carriers or utilize the state's MNsure health insurance exchange.
State officials said a new "reinsurance" program will play a big role in holding down rates next year, but Gov.
Plus, the 2018 premiums announced Monday will kick in just as the state's other one-time measure to rescue the individual market -- 25 percent premium rebates for many who buy the coverage -- is scheduled to shut off. That means tens of thousands of consumers could be paying more next year, even though their premiums on paper will be holding steady or going down.
"Because they had a 25 percent discount, their actual experience will have a net effect of feeling like ... they have to pay more," Rothman said. More than 90,000 people per month in the market have been receiving the rebates.
The rates released Monday apply to the roughly 166,000 people in the state's individual market, which primarily serves people under age 65 who are either self-employed or don't get coverage from their employer. The individual market has undergone sweeping change since 2014 with the federal Affordable Care Act (ACA), which launched MNsure and eliminated pre-existing condition exclusions.
Monday's rate release comes as uncertainty continues at the federal level about the future of the ACA, which
The change is one factor, he said, that explains why
Commerce approved an average 2.8 percent increase for HMO customers at
The impact of the averages, however, plays out differently in different parts of the state.
Commerce said the "benchmark" premium for a 40-year-old buying individual coverage in
In
A little more than half of all individual market consumers currently buy through MNsure, and many of those consumers qualify for federal tax credits that cap their premium costs. The subsidies are available to people with household incomes of up to 400 percent of the federal poverty level, which in 2018 is
Those with incomes above the tax credit cutoff, as well as those who buy off-exchange policies, would be the primary beneficiaries of the new reinsurance program, since they will be paying the market price for coverage next year.
While Dayton hasn't yet signed the agreement to create the reinsurance program, he issued a statement last month saying his administration is legally required to do so. Dayton has been upset about terms of the federal agreement, however, because it includes a large cut in funding to the state's MinnesotaCare health insurance program.
"The governor assured all Minnesotans these rates are final,"
Twitter: @chrissnowbeck
___
(c)2017 the Star Tribune (Minneapolis)
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