You are spot on!
Its funded on a national level. States weren't inclined to spend that money. 19 states weren't even inclined to spend 10% of the cost of insuring 5 million people. Try to look at the situation from reality instead of a conservative narrative (this advice pretty much applies to all your posts). It will greatly improve the quality of your posts.If aca works on a national level there is no reason it wont work on a state level too.
That all sounds very nice and rational and articulate and all, but these problems of rate increases and companies pulling out of states has been happening since long before Trump came around. Now, Trump certainly has helped speed it along to some degree, but it cannot all be laid at his feet.
Not if one wants to be fair and objective, at least.
.....
Seems I can't explain it simply enough for you.
Already stated that I wasn't puzzed at all. That's twice now. How many times until it takes with you?
You said they were lying, I said that they were just show votes. Unless you are calling something else a lie, because it, again, makes no sense in reference to a vote.
And what about the $2500 in savings per year? Are getting that?
But rate increases and insurers pulling out the market also existed before Obamacare. But the fact is republicans encouraging people to not sign up, defunding the risk corridor program (that was identical to Medicaid part D) and not expanding Medicaid also drove up prices. Defunding the risk corridor program drove insurers out of business (and hence out of the market). Trump's actions and threats only made both issues worse. Its just beyond hypocritical for republicans to decry "increasing premiums" as they purposely cause increasing premiums. And one simply needs to look at Nevada to see that they found a simple tweak to get more insurers in the market.
The surprisingly simple way Nevada recruited more Obamacare insurers
I'm sorry, its just painful to think how much better Obamacare would be for everybody if republicans weren't encouraging people to not sign up and driving up prices. Prices will eventually stabilize as the markets stabilize but when they do, the prices will be higher because of republican efforts with fewer enrolless and fewer insurers.
There was no ACA market prior to the ACA.
Is it more generous or does it just distribute the premium differently?
The plan he described makes the insurer immune to the 1st 10k and 50% of additional costs incurred.
So lets say he ran up 100k in medical bills. The 1st.10k isnt covered and the next 45k would not be covered either. Is the silver plan better?
That all sounds very nice and rational and articulate and all, but these problems of rate increases and companies pulling out of states has been happening since long before Trump came around. Now, Trump certainly has helped speed it along to some degree, but it cannot all be laid at his feet.
Not if one wants to be fair and objective, at least.
Under the ACA, do people with no coverage options still get the tax penalty?
If its finacially feasable on the federal level than it should be econimically feasable on the state level without federal assistance. Going forward if your incapable of discussing things absent of your personal digs I wont be responding. Im trying to have an open discussion of the various approaches to improve our healthcare system. If your convinced ACA is the best approach and enough people in your state agree with you, vote for it. raise state taxes if you need too. I dont begrudge you from making that choice. I dont have that right. Why do you feel you have the right to make that choice for the 49 states you do not reside in?Its funded on a national level. States weren't inclined to spend that money. 19 states weren't even inclined to spend 10% of the cost of insuring 5 million people. Try to look at the situation from reality instead of a conservative narrative (this advice pretty much applies to all your posts). It will greatly improve the quality of your posts.
I agree that people need to choose their plan based on which plan fits their needs the best. I am curious how much money the insurance company is sheilded from paying if we used that same 100k cost example and the person had the platinum plan. I think its an interesting question worth exploring. You pay a higher premium but have a lower deductable, but overall is the insurance company still only paying out 45k of that persons costs or is the number significantly lower or higher.No, and this is what I was getting at when I said: "Bronze plans are generally good for two kinds of people: those who don't expect to have medical expenses and prefer a catastrophic plan, and those who expect to have a lot of health expenses (given the way the OOP max works)."
If you're incurring more than about $18K in expenses in this situation you're better off with the bronze plan because the OOP maxes are the same.
Let's be clear: there was one big jump in benchmark premiums and that was this year. And the reason was pretty clearly to make up for underpricing in previous years to achieve profitability (which appears to have been accomplished).
As for market exits before, that's more or les normal market dynamics and the sort of sorting to be expected. What's starting to happen now, with insurers leaving specifically because the administration is threatening to upend markets is a very different beast. Particularly now that it's pretty clear the markets have otherwise stabilized after a tumultuous first few years.
Hasn't happened yet. But almost certainly not.
I agree that people need to choose their plan based on which plan fits their needs the best. I am curious how much money the insurance company is sheilded from paying if we used that same 100k cost example and the person had the platinum plan. I think its an interesting question worth exploring. You pay a higher premium but have a lower deductable, but overall is the insurance company still only paying out 45k of that persons costs or is the number significantly lower or higher.
If its finacially feasable on the federal level than it should be econimically feasable on the state level without federal assistance. Going forward if your incapable of discussing things absent of your personal digs I wont be responding. Im trying to have an open discussion of the various approaches to improve our healthcare system. If your convinced ACA is the best approach and enough people in your state agree with you, vote for it. raise state taxes if you need too. I dont begrudge you from making that choice. I dont have that right. Why do you feel you have the right to make that choice for the 49 states you do not reside in?
But rate increases and insurers pulling out the market also existed before Obamacare. But the fact is republicans encouraging people to not sign up, defunding the risk corridor program (that was identical to Medicaid part D) and not expanding Medicaid also drove up prices. Defunding the risk corridor program drove insurers out of business (and hence out of the market). Trump's actions and threats only made both issues worse. Its just beyond hypocritical for republicans to decry "increasing premiums" as they purposely cause increasing premiums. And one simply needs to look at Nevada to see that they found a simple tweak to get more insurers in the market.
The surprisingly simple way Nevada recruited more Obamacare insurers
I'm sorry, its just painful to think how much better Obamacare would be for everybody if republicans weren't encouraging people to not sign up and driving up prices. Prices will eventually stabilize as the markets stabilize but when they do, the prices will be higher because of republican efforts with fewer enrolless and fewer insurers.
It MUST be collapsing, it's got OBAMA in the name, so it has to go, whatever. If it's not collapsing now, it will be shortly.
If its finacially feasable on the federal level than it should be econimically feasable on the state level without federal assistance. Going forward if your incapable of discussing things absent of your personal digs I wont be responding. Im trying to have an open discussion of the various approaches to improve our healthcare system. If your convinced ACA is the best approach and enough people in your state agree with you, vote for it. raise state taxes if you need too. I dont begrudge you from making that choice. I dont have that right. Why do you feel you have the right to make that choice for the 49 states you do not reside in?
Sent from my SM-T800 using Tapatalk
Study: Obamacare Is Not Collapsing
What is hurting some ACA exchanges is the uncertainty injected into the healthcare structure by Trump and hard conservatives in the GOP majority Congress. Health insurance companies usually make policy/pricing changes today that are based on 12 month industry analyst predictions. But this is impossible when the government purposefully injects uncertainty into the equations. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R/KY) has far less than the number of GOP votes necessary to pass the Better Care Reconciliation Act of 2017. If a compromise cannot be reached in the near term, McConnell will be forced to consider Democrat amendments to craft a passable bill.
Additional: Individual Insurance Market Performance in Early 2017
your math is losing me on how you come to the conclusion that the insurer is picking up 90% of the costs?That market doesn't have a platinum plan. But let's use the examples of the bronze and silver plans we've already looked at, plus the "best" (i.e., lowest OOP max) gold plan available. These examples are all for a 50-year-old in that market.
So you have a premium, plus what you have to contribute when you incur your $100K expense.
With an expense that high, you obviously hit the OOP max in every plan so your situation is:
[table="width: 500, class: grid"]
[tr]
[td][/td]
[td]Annual Premium[/td]
[td]Person Pays[/td]
[td]Insurer Pays[/td]
[td]Percent Covered by Insurers[/td]
[/tr]
[tr]
[td]Bronze[/td]
[td]$4,040[/td]
[td]$7,150[/td]
[td]$92,850[/td]
[td]92.9%[/td]
[/tr]
[tr]
[td]Silver[/td]
[td]$5,020[/td]
[td]$7,150[/td]
[td]$92,850[/td]
[td]92.9%[/td]
[/tr]
[tr]
[td]Gold[/td]
[td]$8,382[/td]
[td]$5,000[/td]
[td]$95,000[/td]
[td]95.0%[/td]
[/tr]
[/table]
As I already pointed out, in that case where your expenses are particularly high you're best off in the bronze plan (thanks to the OOP limits). But no matter what you choose, the insurer is picking up 90%+ of your expenses.
Im not avoiding anything. People are saying that ACA is doing better than its being portrayed as and is self sustaining. Other people disagree that ACA lives up to those claims. Some dont like the lack of choice associated with ACA. Im saying each state should decide for itself. If ACA is working so well it should become a popular choice.You want to complain about Obamacare but you are slowly realizing everything you've been told is a lie so we get the "hey, I'll make it about states rights" narrative. As I've already pointed out, its funded on a national level. And that's because it was taxed on a national level. You couldn't get 19 states to spend 10% of the cost of insuring 5 million people. Now you think you can get 50 states to pass the taxes necessary to fund it. Oh but you magically avoid that point by telling us you don't begrudge a state that does that. I'll let the 50 states know you don't begrudge them democracy. Oddly, you still begrudge democrats for democracy on a national level.
And T, what you call it a dig, I call it solid advice. Case in point, not begrudging states democracy is looking at something from a narrative because it ignores you and yours obediently begrudging the federal govt for democracy. It seemed like such a good point when you posted it didn't it? Had you followed my advice, that wouldn't have happened.
Insurers come and insurers go but before Obamacare we were never down to just one or zero insurers.
Im not avoiding anything. People are saying that ACA is doing better than its being portrayed as and is self sustaining. Other people disagree that ACA lives up to those claims. Some dont like the lack of choice associated with ACA. Im saying each state should decide for itself. If ACA is working so well it should become a popular choice.
Yes A60, you stated several times you weren't puzzled but you've explained nothing. If you want me to believe you weren't "puzzled" you need to explain your statement "That says to me that Republicans just can't let go of their new found power over us.” Flailing, whining and telling me you weren't puzzled does not explain that statement. It looks like you're trying to explain this "new found" action from republicans. Its not about me. its not about your claim you weren't "puzzled". Its about a statement you made that looks like you're making excuses for "new found" republican hypocrisy.
We were not discussing what people say. We were discussing your “states rights” narrative. Seems like your narrative requires you to deflect from my post. That’s what happens when you look at real world problems through the rose colored glasses of a conservative narrative Your “narrative” is still ignoring that 19 states wouldn’t spend 10% of the cost of healthcare for 5 million people. Your narrative simply cant address the fact that states don’t want to spend the money hence nothing would get done in the vast majority of them. And here’s another thing chants and slogans don’t address: the escalating cost of healthcare and the millions denied coverage and the millions more who couldn’t afford it was a national problem. The federal govt not only has the right to step in, it has a mandate (yea, I could have said obligation). Something about promoting the general welfare.
Anyhoo, once again I’m trying to have an open and honest discussion with someone who’s trying to limit the conversation to what “aligns” with a narrative. Hence the deflection at the first sign of a fact. Please don’t begrudge democrats for democracy and don’t begrudge me for posting facts.
your math is losing me on how you come to the conclusion that the insurer is picking up 90% of the costs?
When I did the math for the bronze plan I came up with the plan only covering 45k of the 100k billed based on the numbers the other poster provided. Are you saying his numbers are wrong?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?