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AHIP Is Right, and May Be Low

Wednesday, October 14, 2009 General News
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ALEXANDRIA, Va., Oct. 13 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Today, CAHI Executive Director Dr. Merrill Matthews released the following statement:

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Critics are up in arms over America's Health Insurance Plans (AHIP) daring to speak the truth about the Senate health care reform proposal, and we applaud the organization's efforts. If anything AHIP's analysis of health premium increases is too low. Supporters of the health bills are simply ignoring years of states' evidence of many of these proposed Senate and House health reforms.

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Last May CAHI released a report from our consulting health actuaries estimating the cost-increasing impact of several health insurance reform options. It found that the cost of a policy in the individual market (i.e., non-group) with an individual mandate, guaranteed issue and some form of community rating -- all of which are in the Senate and House plans -- would drive up the cost of a policy between 65 percent and 95 percent within a few years -- not 2019.

And a plan with no mandate -- which the president initially backed -- would more than double the cost of a policy. Relaxing the penalty, as the Senate Finance bill has done, moves the legislation closer to the no-mandate category.

While AHIP looked at the entire private market (i.e., group as well as individual policies), CAHI only considered the individual market. But it is important to note that the group market is already essentially a guaranteed issue market. Companies must cover new employees regardless of their health condition.

So while the Senate bill will have an impact on the group market, the most dramatic increases will come in the individual market, where insurers in most states are still allowed to underwrite policies.

Moreover, the CAHI study was published before anyone considered imposing excise taxes on the more costly -- they aren't necessarily "gold-plated" -- plans. And there will likely be even more cost shifting to the private sector if the legislation cuts reimbursements and pays doctors close to Medicare rates.

In sum, both the House and Senate bills will lead to a dramatic rise in health insurance premiums, especially in the individual market. And particularly for younger healthy people. This isn't speculation. It's already happened in the states that have adopted guaranteed issue and community rating. Just compare prices  in the individual market in Massachusetts with most other states; the premiums are roughly double.

CAHI does not support an individual mandate. We think that more competition, fewer regulations and subsidies for low-income families will lower health insurance costs and expand coverage. But the evidence of the damage the current proposals will cause is there if the administration and the media will only look.

For more on what similar measures have done in the states see: http://www.cahi.org/cahi_contents/resources/pdf/destroyinginsmrkts05.pdf

To view the reports referenced in this release go to:  http://www.cahi.org/cahi_contents/resources/pdf/n154RiskAssessment.pdf

http://www.cahi.org/cahi_contents/resources/pdf/CAHICommunityRatingStudy.pdf

Founded in 1992, CAHI is a nonprofit, nonpartisan research and advocacy association whose mission is to promote access, affordability and choice in American health care. CAHI's membership includes health insurance companies (active in the individual, small group, HSA and senior markets), small businesses, physicians, actuaries and insurance producers and brokers.

SOURCE Council for Affordable Health Insurance

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