Republican ACA proposal is Worse than I thought

Charles Gaba assessing Republican and Trump’s mandated changes to the ACA. One sure thing the Congressional Republicans are resisting is the thought of extending the enhanced tax credits. Without which, most people could not afford healthcare insurance. Keep in mind what this is all about also. Just in case you forgot, the program cuts is all about providing tax cuts to the upper 1 to 5% in income.

Danger, Will Robinson: Trump’s (delayed?) ACA proposal is even WORSE than I thought,

According to the Politico story, the Trump proposal supposedly included the following provisions:

  • An extension of the enhanced tax credits at current thresholds for most enrollees for two years
  • Bringing back the “Subsidy Cliff” hard cut-off of any financial help at 700% of the Federal Poverty Level (FPL)
  • The addition of a mandatory minimum monthly premium for all enrollees, most likely $5/mo
  • Switching CSR expenses from the current arrangement (baked into gross premiums) to federal reimbursement payments (which would kill Silver Loading, which would hurt millions of lower-income enrollees while only helping a tiny number of higher-income ones)
  • Some sort of “option” for people to convert a “portion” of their premium tax credits into funds for a dedicated Health Savings Account (HSA) instead…as long as they enroll in Bronze plans

However, it turns out that Politico didn’t even include all of the ugly requirements included in the “framework” which was supposedly going to be introduced yesterday.

In a story last night about how the rollout was apparently “delayed” due to instant and massive backlash by Congressional Republicans at the thought of extending the enhanced tax credits under any circumstances, CNN included some additional details about Trump’s proposed “framework” proposal:

…and there was even more detail included in this piece by the conservative Washington Times:

  • “EXPANDING PLANS OUTSIDE THE ACA EXCHANGES”

Again, “Short-Term, Limited Duration” plans (STLDs) are exactly the type of junk insurance which the ACA was designed to curtail: They generally can cherry-pick their enrollees, deny coverage or charge more for those with pre-existing conditions, don’t have to include coverage of stuff like maternity care, mental health services, pediatric care, etc; they often include annual or lifetime limits on coverage and so forth.

The ACA didn’t ban STLDs, which can make sense for some people under very limited circumstances, but it did discourage them, and some states have banned them outright while others have placed strong restrictions or regulations on them.

The Obama Administration limited STLDs to be just that: Short-term coverage only, for a limited duration: You could only enroll in a STLD for up to 3 months per year. Trump 1.0 reversed that & opened the flood gates on them (defeating the entire reason they’re called “short term” or “of limited duration”); the Biden Administration reversed that by restricting them to 4 months, and now Trump 2.0 has reversed that again.

I’ve always strongly opposed STLDs (and related types of junk plans), but until 2021 I was willing to accept that they were a necessary evil as long as the original premium tax credit formula–including the 400% FPL Subsidy Cliff–was in place. Put more simply, there’s a significant population of Americans who were stuck between a rock and a hard place where they weren’t eligible for federal tax credits but also couldn’t afford to easily (or at all) pay full price for an ACA-compliant policy. For that population, I had to grudgingly admit that STLDs, with all of their dangers and shortcomings, might be the only viable option.

All of that changed when Congressional Democrats passed, and President Biden signed, the American Rescue Plan Act into law in 2021: With the tax credit formula beefed up to the levels it should have been in the first place and the dreaded Subsidy Cliff eliminated, there was no longer any justification at all for anyone to enroll in an STLD except under very rare circumstances.

Now, in theory expanding STLDs wide open shouldn’t cause nearly as much damage in a world where the enhanced tax credit formula exists since the market for them should be far smaller…but again, Trump wants codify his “Junk Plans for All!” policy permanently while only extending the enhanced tax credits for two years.

Even worse, it’s possible (this is difficult to tell from the wording of the CNN story) that Trump is even proposing to allow ACA tax credits to be used for STLDs, which–if this is the case–would basically undermine the ACA market.

The whole rationale for the tax credits in the first place is that adding regulations like guaranteed issue, community rating, essential health benefits, etc etc are the reason why ACA-compliant plans have a relatively high list price in the first place; therefore, the government is providing financial help so people can actually afford them.

If that same financial help can be used for any piece of shit “plan” on the market, it utterly defeats the point. This would be like if the now-defunct $7,500 EV tax credit could be applied towards any gas guzzling Internal Combustion Engine lemon that gets 3 miles per gallon. The point of the tax credits is to encourage as many people as possible to enroll in comprehensive healthcare plans which don’t discriminate against people based on their medical history/condition.

  • MAKING EVERYONE PAY AT LEAST 2% OF THEIR INCOME
  • HSAs FOR CATASTROPHIC PLANS

If Trump is planning on letting “a portion of” tax credits be converted into HSA funds to be used with Catastrophic plans, it’s very close to going down the same route as letting them be used for STLDs: This would undermine the ACA market by draining it of younger, healthier enrollees while leaving older, sicker enrollees in the ACA risk pool . . . thus turning it into a de facto “High Risk Pool” market by default.

  • GENDER-AFFIRMING CARE / UNDOCUMENTED IMMIGRANTS

The Trump Regime already implemented both of these cruel, pointless policies over six months ago. However, there’s a major difference between the Trump Regime issuing administrative rules about these restrictions and Congress actually codifying them into law.

For one thing, about half of the other provisions included in the Trump CMS “Integrity Rule” last spring have been shot down (at least temporarily) by a federal judge . . . in some cases because they can only go through via actual legislation.

For another, any changes made via administrative or regulatory moves (including executive orders) are temporary: They can be reversed by the next Administration. If any of the provisions above were to be baked into legislation passed by Congress and signed into law by Trump–and if such provisions were made permanent, unlike the 2-year extension of the enhanced tax credits–then that’s exactly what would happen unless a future Congress & President were to reverse them.