How Will State and Federal Actions Affect Individual Health Insurance Coverage for Middle-Income Americans? (2024)

The Affordable Care Act (ACA) has accomplished much that its drafters intended. There is considerable evidence of increased access to health care and reduced medical debt. But there is growing concern about affordability of health insurance coverage for middle-income working-age consumers — those whose household income exceeds 400 percent of the federal poverty level (about $100,000 for a family of four) — who do not have coverage through their work. This is virtually the only group of Americans who, when insured, do not receive some form of direct federal financial assistance or tax subsidies for health care coverage.

Trump Administration Actions Have Accelerated Individual Market Destabilization

It was hoped that the push of the ACA’s individual mandate and the pull of the premium tax credits would create large and stable markets for individual insurance. However, since its beginning several factors have weakened the individual market — and Trump administration policies and repeal threats from Congress have accelerated its destabilization.1

Actions such as the defunding of cost-sharing reduction payments and the 2019 repeal of the individual-mandate penalty make it difficult for insurers to offer stable and affordable rates. Steep premium increases are likely in much of the country, and while premium tax credits will expand to cover these increases for lower-income consumers, individuals not eligible for tax credits will have to cover the full increase themselves.

The administration’s response has been to propose lower-cost alternatives for young and healthy middle-income consumers, for example by expanding short-term coverage to last nearly a full year. Short-term coverage, intended to cover brief gaps in insurance, is not subject to any of the ACA’s requirements because it is not meant to serve as major medical coverage. If consumers are offered full-year “short-term” coverage, 4.3 million (likely healthier-than-average) consumers may flee the comprehensive insurance market, increasing premiums for those who remain.

Another administration proposal would allow small employer groups and individuals who are — or claim to be — “working owners” to enroll in association health plans.2 These plans would not be subject to many of the ACA’s individual and small-group market consumer protections. They also would attract lower-cost consumers, leaving those with higher risks behind to face higher premiums.

State Actions

Some states are seeking their own solutions. In January, Idaho proposed authorizing “state-based” plans that would ignore some ACA requirements. Insurers offering state-based plans, for example, could charge higher rates to individuals with preexisting conditions and exclude some ACA-required benefits. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) informed Idaho that if it failed to enforce the ACA, HHS would have to do so. Idaho is reportedly still trying to find a way around the ACA, but it is unlikely that any insurer will offer ACA noncompliant coverage in the face of threatened HHS enforcement.

In contrast to Idaho’s frontal assault, Iowa has opted to crawl through an ACA loophole. The ACA only regulates “issuers,” that is health insurers licensed and regulated under state insurance law. Entities that offer coverage but are not insurers are not subject to the ACA’s insurance reforms. Recently adopted Iowa legislation would allow the Iowa Farm Bureau to offer health coverage free from all state insurance regulation — including solvency and consumer protections. The Farm Bureau plans would be administered by Wellmark Blue Cross plan, but Wellmark would not function as an insurer and thus would not be subject to the ACA’s insurance reforms (although it might be subject to the ACA’s antidiscrimination provisions and perhaps some state regulation).3

Each of these approaches will inevitably segment the market. As they make cheaper insurance available to the young and healthy, they will make coverage more expensive for older and less healthy consumers. Consumers who are not eligible for premium tax credits must bear the full cost of these increased premiums, and many will not be able to afford real insurance coverage. The Urban Institute projects that 2.6 million fewer people will have minimum essential coverage by 2019.

Strategies That Would Stabilize the Individual Market for All Consumers

There are, of course, steps states could take to stabilize the market for all. They could enact their own individual mandate, for example, as Maryland and the District of Columbia are considering. State reinsurance programs under ACA state innovation waivers, like those adopted by Alaska, Minnesota, and Oregon and being considered by Maryland and Wisconsin, could reduce premiums across the market. State efforts to regulate short-term or association health plans could fend off the destruction of the ACA-compliant market. Massachusetts, New Jersey, and New York, for example apply extensive consumer protections, including guaranteed issue, to all new policies in the individual market and do not permit medical underwriting for short-term plans.

In the end, however, the federal government must confront a basic question of fairness. It subsidizes the purchase of insurance for the vast majority of Americans — the employed, the poor, the elderly, and low-income individuals in ACA marketplaces — but not for middle-income Americans who must purchase insurance on their own. There are a number of options the government could consider to reduce the cost of insurance for this remaining group. For example, reinsurance for the entire individual market significantly reduced premiums for all during the first three years of the ACA and could be reinstated. Insurers whose highest claims are shared with the federal government would be able to cover consumers of all income levels for less, and the individual market would stabilize. RAND has found that extending the ACA’s reinsurance program could result in both lower premiums and deficit savings. Reinsurance does not have to be politically controversial: all of the major Republican ACA repeal proposals of 2017 included it.

For eight years, fierce political conflict has prevented needed improvements in the ACA. If the United States is to avoid the specter of a growing number of uninsured — and unhappy — middle-class consumers, Congress will likely need to act soon to address the fact that many middle-income purchasers of individual insurance in the U.S. face unaffordable insurance prices without the financial assistance that so many of their countrymen receive.

Notes

1 Early factors weakening the market include Congress’ defunding of a premium stabilization program in 2015 and the Obama administration’s decision to let consumers retain insurance that did not comply with ACA requirements beyond 2013.

2 Anyone can attest to be a working owner and association health plans have no obligation to confirm their claims.

3 Tennessee has operated a similar Farm Bureau program for some time although, while the individual mandate remained in place, consumers who chose coverage that was not compliant with the ACA had to pay the penalty if they did not otherwise qualify for an exemption.

How Will State and Federal Actions Affect Individual Health Insurance Coverage for Middle-Income Americans? (2024)

FAQs

How does the federal government affect health insurance? ›

The federal government has played a major role in health care over the past half century from the establishment of Medicare and Medicaid in 1965—ensuring access to insurance coverage for a large portion of the U.S. population—to multiple pieces of legislation from the 1980s to early 2000s that protect individuals under ...

How does the Affordable Care Act affect the middle class? ›

Middle-class families that don't qualify for income-based help face an increasing financial burden when getting coverage on the Affordable Care Act's insurance exchanges, a new study found.

What are the factors that impact health insurance for Americans? ›

Five factors can affect a plan's monthly premium: location, age, tobacco use, plan category, and whether the plan covers dependents. Notice: FYI Your health, medical history, or gender can't affect your premium.

How does the Affordable Care Act affect individuals? ›

The law will result in health insurance coverage for about 94% of the American population, reducing the uninsured by 31 million people, and increasing Medicaid enrollment by 15 million beneficiaries. Approximately 24 million people are expected to remain without coverage.

How does state government affect healthcare? ›

State health agencies collect and analyze information; conduct inspections; plan; set policies and standards; carry out national and state mandates; manage and oversee environmental, educational, and personal health services; and assure access to health care for underserved residents; they are involved in resources ...

What happens in the event that state and federal health insurance regulations conflict? ›

When federal law preempts state law, the federal law negates enforcement of the state law with respect to those matters on which Congress has made federal law supreme. Section 514 of ERISA provides for federal preemption of state laws that relate to employee health benefit plans.

How does the middle class afford health insurance? ›

Employees typically pay only a portion of premiums out of pocket, with their employers paying the rest. In addition, middle-income families with employer coverage receive a tax subsidy averaging over $5,000, covering close to 40 percent of premiums.

Do most middle class Americans have access to quality, affordable medical care? ›

Middle-class families don't qualify for government programs like the Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP) and Medicaid and are left with high medical costs for them and their children.

How can the government make healthcare more affordable? ›

By reforming existing laws and enacting new policies – to minimize inefficiency, enhance the consumer experience, better leverage innovations, lower administrative costs and eliminate the need for reliance on harmful health care taxes, which only make health care more unaffordable – the following solutions will make ...

Who is most likely to lack health insurance in the United States? ›

Age. Three-quarters of the uninsured are adults (ages 18–64 years), while one-quarter of the uninsured are children. Compared with other age groups, young adults are the most likely to go without coverage.

What is the biggest problem in American healthcare? ›

A 2023 survey found that over half of U.S. individuals indicated the cost of accessing treatment was the biggest problem facing the national healthcare system. This is much higher than the global average of 31 percent and is in line with the high cost of health care in the U.S. compared to other high-income countries.

Why should the government provide health care? ›

Because the market alone cannot ensure all Americans access to quality health care, the government must preserve the interests of its citizens by supplementing the market where there are gaps and regulating the market where there is inefficiency or unfairness.

How has the Affordable Care Act affected healthcare? ›

Protected more than 133 million people with pre-existing conditions, like cancer, asthma or diabetes, pregnancy, from being denied coverage for their pre-existing condition. Mandated that most insurers cover 10 essential health benefits, including mental health and prescription drugs.

How has the Affordable Care Act affected healthcare costs? ›

The ACA helps to make health care more affordable in two ways: by providing insurance coverage for approximately 50 million people who are currently uninsured and by striving to control health care costs by changing how medical services are paid for.

How does the Affordable Care Act affect healthcare professionals? ›

Health care workers are facing mounting stress and instability as the Affordable Care Act forces industry changes that overburden health professionals. The ACA will impose 190 million additional hours of paperwork annually, limit time with patients, and insert government into the patient–provider relationship.

Does the federal government regulate health insurance? ›

Insurance is subject to the laws in the State where the policy is issued. In California, insurance is regulated by us, the California Department of Insurance.

What has the federal government done for healthcare? ›

Since taking office, the President has delivered the resources necessary to end the COVID emergency; built on the success of the ACA to further close the uninsured gap; reduced Americans' healthcare premiums and prescription drug costs; finally allowed Medicare to negotiate for lower prescription drug prices and taken ...

Does the federal government regulate insurance? ›

The insurance sector is primarily regulated at the state level by individual state agencies. Title V of the Dodd-Frank Act establishes a Federal Insurance Office (FIO) within the Department of the Treasury to promote national coordination in the insurance sector.

How does the federal government create healthcare policy? ›

On the federal level, elected and appointed officials write healthcare policy with input from other professionals. Like other public-policy decisions, healthcare policy on the federal level is traditionally made through the three branches of government. The judicial branch interprets the policy.

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