Robert Pear / The New York Times
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/ 12/10/us/politics/marco-rubio- obamacare-affordable-care-act. html?_r=3&mtrref=undefined
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/
A
little-noticed health care provision that Senator Marco Rubio of
Florida slipped into a giant spending law last year has tangled up the
Obama administration, sent tremors through health insurance markets and
rattled confidence in the durability of President Obama’s signature
health law.
So for all the Republican
talk about dismantling the Affordable Care Act, one Republican
presidential hopeful has actually done something toward achieving that
goal.
Mr. Rubio’s efforts against the
so-called risk corridor provision of the health law has hardly risen to
the forefront of the race for the Republican presidential nomination,
but his plan limiting how much the government can spend to protect
insurance companies against financial losses has shown the effectiveness
of quiet legislative sabotage.
The
risk corridors were intended to help some insurance companies if they
ended up with too many new sick people on their rolls and too little
cash from premiums to cover their medical bills in the first three years
under the health law. But because of Mr. Rubio’s efforts, the
administration says it will pay only 13 percent of what insurance
companies were expecting to receive this year. The payments were
supposed to help insurers cope with the risks they assumed when they
decided to participate in the law’s new insurance marketplaces.
Mr.
Rubio’s talking point is bumper-sticker ready. The payments, he says,
are “a taxpayer-funded bailout for insurance companies.” But without
them, insurers say, many consumers will face higher premiums and may
have to scramble for other coverage. Already, some insurers have shut
down over the unexpected shortfall.
“Risk
corridors have become a political football,” said Dawn H. Bonder, the
president and chief executive of Health Republic of Oregon, an insurance
co-op that announced in October it would close its doors after learning
that it would receive only $995,000 of the $7.9 million it had expected
from the government. “We were stable, had a growing membership and
could have been successful if we had received those payments. We relied
on the payments in pricing our plans, but the government reneged on its
promise. I am disgusted.”
Blue Cross
and Blue Shield executives have warned the administration and Congress
that eliminating the federal payments could have a devastating impact on
insurance markets.
Twelve of the 23
nonprofit insurance cooperatives created under the law have failed,
disrupting coverage for more than 700,000 people, and co-op executives
like Ms. Bonder have angrily cited the sharp reduction in federal
payments as a factor in their demise.
But
Mr. Rubio is pressing forward, demanding a provision in the final
spending bill now under negotiation that continues the current risk
corridor restrictions, or even eliminates the program altogether. That
enormous spending bill is being worked out as Congress slides toward a
deadline of Friday, when much of the federal government’s funding runs out.
“If
you want to be involved in the exchanges and you lose money, the
American taxpayer should not have to bail you out,” Mr. Rubio said on
the Senate floor on Thursday.
A
White House spokeswoman, Katie Hill, declined to offer the
administration’s position on proposals that she said were still
theoretical. “We are not going to weigh in on the possible inclusion of
proposals floated by members of Congress” in potential legislation, she
said.
Congress established the program
in 2010 to protect insurers against the uncertainties they faced in
setting the level of insurance premiums when they did not know who would
sign up for coverage under the Affordable Care Act. Under the law, the
federal government shares risk with insurers, limiting their gains and
losses on insurance sold in the public marketplaces from 2014 through
2016. If consumer payments to an insurer exceed the company’s medical
expenses by a certain amount, the insurer pays some of that profit to
the government. But if premium payments fall short of medical
expenditures by a certain amount, the insurer is eligible for payments
from the government.
The hope was that payments into the program would be in balance with payments out, shielding taxpayers from responsibility.
Mr.
Rubio latched on to the issue in late 2013, recognizing not only the
importance of risk corridors to the operation of the Affordable Care Act
but also the political potency of a program he labeled crony capitalism
— putting taxpayers “on the hook for Washington’s mistakes,” as he said
when he reintroduced his risk corridor bill in January.
The
“bailouts” of big banks and other financial firms during the economic
crisis of 2008 and the rescue of the Big Three automakers that year and
the next remain politically unpopular.
Then
the numbers rolled in from the insurance exchanges’ first year of
operation: Losses were so steep that insurance-company requests for risk
corridor payments were $2.9 billion, compared with only $362 million
paid into the program by profitable plans.
Mr.
Rubio says he “saved taxpayers $2.5 billion” — the difference between
those two amounts — because his measure prevented the government from
using other sources of money for the risk corridor payments.
The
administration has repeatedly told insurers that it will explore other
funding sources to keep its commitment to companies losing money in the
exchanges, but Mr. Rubio effectively tied the hands of federal health
officials this year.
Like many other
observers of the health law, the Obama administration initially failed
to appreciate the impact of the Rubio restrictions. Kevin J. Counihan,
the chief executive of the federal insurance marketplace, told state
officials in July that money collected from insurance companies would be
“sufficient to pay for all risk corridor payments.” More recently, the
administration consoled insurers by telling them that it would make
additional risk corridor payments from money collected in 2015 and 2016.
But in a new report, the credit ratings agency Standard & Poor’s says that money will not be there.
Mr.
Rubio says Mr. Obama compounded his problems by diverting risk corridor
funds to quell a 2013 furor over canceled insurance policies. That
year, the president announced that states could let insurers renew
canceled plans and continue coverage for several years even if those
policies did not meet the requirements of the federal health law.
Insurers
were shocked by the sudden change. They had set 2014 premiums on the
assumption that healthy people with old insurance policies would move
into the new marketplace, but Mr. Obama allowed many of them to stay
out. In a letter to state insurance commissioners in November 2013, the
administration said “the risk corridor program should help ameliorate
unanticipated changes in premium revenue.”
Five days later, Mr. Rubio introduced his bill to kill the risk corridor program.
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