Contributor Post Created with Sketch. How Obamacare Might Turn into Trumpcare. Or Is it Ryancare?

 

112316healthGoldman Sachs takes its best shot at outlining a possible future for US healthcare reform:

Our best guess is a continuation of the tax credits and Medicaid grants, but in a different form. At this early stage, our expectation is that Congress will enact a new system that continues to provide for an expanded Medicaid program and tax credits to pay for insurance premiums, but with significant changes in the way those resources are allocated. In our view, the best guide to how Congress and the Trump Administration might reform the current system is in House Speaker Paul Ryan’s plan released in June 2016. It would provide for:

  • Tax credits for individual market health insurance. The plan would provide refundable, advanceable tax credits (essentially the same concept as a monthly payment from the government) to purchase health insurance on the private market. Unlike the current program, which is based on the average premium and adjusted based on income, the proposed credit would be adjusted only based on age.
  • Repeal of the coverage mandates and partial repeal of insurance market reforms. The proposal would eliminate the mandates on employers to provide coverage and individuals to obtain it. It would loosen the rules regarding pre-existing conditions and premium variation, most importantly by specifying that premiums for the oldest enrollees can be no more than 5 times the premium for the youngest members (the current ratio is 3:1). This would encourage younger (i.e., healthier) enrollees to join. For older enrollees, House Republicans propose to use federal funds to subsidize “high risk pools” to cap premiums once they reach a certain level.
  • Partial reversal of the Medicaid expansion. The House plan would offer states a choice between a “block grant” – a lump sum provided to states roughly equal to what they currently receive excluding the cost of the Medicaid expansion—or a per-capita payment that would roughly equal current spending per-enrollee spending but would grow more slowly than health costs.

Not a bad guess. Also don’t expect any changes until 2019 at the earliest. And who knows how the prospect of big changes will affect insurer participation. I would also note that this might reduce spending vs. the current baseline, but certainly means higher spending than in the pre-Obamacare era. Interesting to see how Republicans handle that, assuming budget deficits and “small government” are still relevant issue within the party.

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  1. Z in MT Member

    James Pethokoukis: Also don’t expect any changes until 2019 at the earliest.

    2019 is too late. If significant changes don’t get implemented by the 2018 midterms the GOP will get hammered. Have the confidence that the public hates Obamacare and wants it fixed now, not years from now.

    • #1
    • November 28, 2016, at 10:18 AM PST
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  2. Misthiocracy got drunk and Member
    Misthiocracy got drunk and Joined in the first year of Ricochet Ricochet Charter Member

    Do they say anything about allowing insurance companies to operate across state lines?

    Do they say anything about scrapping the minimum coverage mandates, so that insurance companies can start offering low-cost “catastrophic coverage” plans?

    • #2
    • November 28, 2016, at 10:23 AM PST
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  3. Skyler Coolidge

    It’s all just more meddling in our lives but in different ways. It won’t have a better result.

    • #3
    • November 28, 2016, at 1:20 PM PST
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