The Affordable Care Act, which you likely know
better as O'bombercare, should really come with a whiplash warning, because it's
been a roller coaster ride since it was fully implemented on Jan. 1, 2014.
Some things went
right, but many went wrong
On one hand, we recently found out from well-known pollster Gallup that the national rate of uninsured Americans is at a new eight-year low of 11%. In all fairness, Gallup and Healthwaysonly began keeping track of the rate of uninsured Americans on a quarterly basis eight years ago, so there are no comparable records before Q1 2008. But since the individual mandate took effect, the rate of uninsured adults has dropped by 6.1%. Presumably, the fewer Americans that are uninsured, the more efficient the healthcare system should be, with medical costs spread over a greater number of people and Americans more likely to receive covered medical and preventive care when they need it.
On one hand, we recently found out from well-known pollster Gallup that the national rate of uninsured Americans is at a new eight-year low of 11%. In all fairness, Gallup and Healthwaysonly began keeping track of the rate of uninsured Americans on a quarterly basis eight years ago, so there are no comparable records before Q1 2008. But since the individual mandate took effect, the rate of uninsured adults has dropped by 6.1%. Presumably, the fewer Americans that are uninsured, the more efficient the healthcare system should be, with medical costs spread over a greater number of people and Americans more likely to receive covered medical and preventive care when they need it.
But things
haven't always gone as planned. The Congressional Budget Office initially
projected that Obamacare would have more than 20 million enrollees by 2016. As
of the end of the 2016 calendar year enrollment period, there were "about
12.7 million" enrollees, per the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services. This massive shortfall in expected enrollees has left insurers, both
national and regional, working with fewer enrolled patients, many of which have
been shown to be costlier and sicker compared to consumers who are covered by
employer-based health plans.
Making matters
worse, many of the dynamics that insurers had been counting on (aside from
higher enrollment totals) haven't played out.
For instance, in
2013 The
Washington Post said that of the 7 million enrollees targeted
in 2014, 2.7 million young adults would need to enroll to make Obamacare
sustainable. Young adults are often healthier and less likely to seek medical
care, meaning their premium payments can more than offset the higher costs of
treating older and/or sicker members. Federally run Healthcare.gov did indeed
enroll 2.7 million young adults in 2016, but there was a total of more than 9.6
million enrollees. In other words, far too few young people are enrolling,
meaning the program is stuck with an older, sicker group of people.
The failure of
the "risk corridor" has also been a disappointment. In simple terms,
the risk corridor was a fund that profitable insurers on Obamacare's exchanges
were expected to pay into. This cash would then be distributed to struggling
and/or new Obamacare plan insurers to help prevent excessive losses from
mispriced premiums. In 2016, the risk corridor wound up being underfunded by
more than $2 billion, leading more than half of Obamacare's approved healthcare
cooperatives to shut their doors.
But the biggest
challenge may be yet to come
Does this action
represent the beginning of the end for Obamacare?
UnitedHealth Group (NYSE:UNH), the nation's largest health insurer and a representative insurer in about half of all Obamacare exchanges, has confirmed via its spokesperson Tyler Mason that it is indeed pulling out of Georgia and Arkansas in 2017.
UnitedHealth Group (NYSE:UNH), the nation's largest health insurer and a representative insurer in about half of all Obamacare exchanges, has confirmed via its spokesperson Tyler Mason that it is indeed pulling out of Georgia and Arkansas in 2017.
For those who
may not recall, late last year UnitedHealth CEO Stephen Hemsley didn't
mince words during an
investor conference when describing how bad Obamacare had been for his company.
Though he took some blame for rushing into a perceived opportunity to gain new
members, Hemsley attributed the exorbitant losses tied to Obamacare plans to
two factors: the ease with which consumers can switch plans on a year-to-year
basis and higher medical utilization costs for members. More recently,
UnitedHealth has implied that it suffered nearly $1 billion in cumulative
Obamacare-related losses between 2015 and 2016. This gloomy forecast led
Hemsley and his team to the conclusion that pulling out of Obamacare might be a
genuinely smart solution.
But here's the
crux: If the largest health insurer in the country pulls out of Obamacare
because it can't turn a profit, then what sort of sustainable future does the
program really have?
At the time of Hemsley's comments, and the
company's subsequent fourth-quarter conference call, no determination had been
made as to whether or not UnitedHealth would actually make good on its threat
to pull out of some (or all) markets. However, UnitedHealth's exit from Georgia
and Arkansas, two states where the company was losing significant sums in its
Obamacare plans, could mark the beginning of a complete exit from Obamacare's
exchanges.
Some say that
the transparency of side-by-side comparisons offered by Obamacare exchanges is
enough to drive down premiums, but I strongly believe that competition among
insurers puts greater pressure on premium prices. If UnitedHealth goes through
with a complete exit, and other insurers follow -- Humana, for example, has
threatened to exit Obamacare exchanges as well -- there won't be much to halt
premium inflation in less competitive states. If this happens, the first
"A" of the ACA, affordability, could be thrown out the window.
What's next?
Maybe the question we should really be asking is whether Obamacare can survive much beyond the 2016 presidential election. With five candidates remaining, only Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton would leave Obamacare in place and build around it. The remaining four candidates would prefer to repeal Obamacare and start anew. Thus the upcoming election will be very telling in terms of what happens to healthcare in this country.
Maybe the question we should really be asking is whether Obamacare can survive much beyond the 2016 presidential election. With five candidates remaining, only Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton would leave Obamacare in place and build around it. The remaining four candidates would prefer to repeal Obamacare and start anew. Thus the upcoming election will be very telling in terms of what happens to healthcare in this country.
Should Clinton
become the 45th president, then our eyes as consumers and investors should be
turned to Obamacare's long-term future. If insurers can't figure out a way to
turn a profit, then big premium hikes may be in order, which in turn could
drive consumers back to the sidelines. Conversely, if insurers grow weary of
waiting things out, they may simply leave Obamacare's exchanges altogether. If
that happens, a lack of competition could drive premiums up as well.
The only
near-certainty at the moment is that Obamacare's long-term future looks as
shaky as ever.
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