I consider this your surrender post on the Obamacare subject. You finally acquiesce about Obamacare driving up private insurance cost. It's only about "expanded Medicaid." Poor people had "unexpanded Medicaid" already. Originally Posted by gnadflyGadfly, you are almost as confused as IFFY on this ( and that is pretty hard to do).
1. Original Medicaid only applied to very poor people whose income was below the poverty line (that would be family of 4 that makes less than $16,000). So, a lot of poor people don't qualify for the original or as you call it unexpanded Medicaid. Note: the individual market is about 30 million people, everyone else under age 65 is getting their health insurance from their employer.
2. The expanded Medicaid (for the states that accepted it) is for a family of 4 that makes more than $16,000 and less than $24,000).
3. If you are a family of 4 and your income is greater than $24,000 and less than $94,000 you qualify to get a subsidy on healthcare.gov (if you cannot get health insurance from your employer) for private health insurance.
4. In the employer based market the rates went up a little like they do every year.
5. In the individual market on the government market place exchanges, if states had balanced risk pools their the premium prices did not spike up.
6. For the states that had unbalanced risk pools like the ones mentioned in post #1, the health insurance companies are asking for large premium increases. In those states there was an overload of sick people who purchased insurance, claims paid out did not equal premium coming in. This did not happen in every state, just certain ones.
7. This taken straight from post #1. The steep premium increases are not in every state.
Assurant is based in Wisconsin, but insurers all across the country are attempting to survive the same perverse incentives that finally undid that venerable company. The Journal lists proposed increases by companies offering plans through exchanges in Connecticut, Indiana, Maryland, Michigan, New Mexico, Oregon, Tennessee, Vermont, Virginia, and Washington state. And many of these companies are already losing huge amounts of money: “BlueCross BlueShield of Tennessee… lost $141 million from exchange-sold plans, stemming largely from a small number of sick enrollees.” It is asking for a 36.3 percent rate increase