Think Obamacare will lower insurance premiums? Think you get better care? Think you will see a doctor whenever you feel you should?
Think again.....
Obamacare architect:
Expect steep increase in health care premiums
By Myles Miller Published:
12:56 AM 02/11/2012 | Updated: 5:46 PM 02/11/2012
Medical
insurance premiums in the United States are on the rise, the chief architect of
President Barack Obama’s health care overhaul has told The Daily Caller.
Massachusetts
Institute of Technology economist Jonathan Gruber, who also devised former
Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney’s statewide health care reforms, is backtracking
on an analysis he provided the White House in support of the 2010 Affordable
Care Act, informing officials in three states that the price of insurance
premiums will dramatically increase under the reforms.
In
an email to The Daily Caller, Gruber framed this new reality in terms of the
same human self-interest that some conservatives had warned in 2010 would
ultimately rule the marketplace.
“The
market was so discriminatory,” Gruber told TheDC, “that only the healthy bought
non-group insurance and the sick just stayed [uninsured].”
“It
is true that even after tax credits some individuals are ‘losers,’” he
conceded, “in that they pay more than before [Obama's] reform.”
Gruber,
whom the Obama administration hired to provide an independent analysis of
reforms, was widely criticized for failing to disclose the conflict of interest
created by $392,600 in no-bid contracts the Department of Health and Human
Services awarded him while he was advising the president’s policy advisers.
Gruber
also received $566,310 during 2008 and 2009 from the National Institutes of
Health to conduct a study on the Medicare Part D plan.
In
2011, officials in Wisconsin, Minnesota and Colorado ordered reports from
Gruber which offer a drastically different portrait in 2012 from the one Obama
painted just 17 months ago.
“As
a consequence of the Affordable Care Act,” the president said in September
2010, ”premiums are going to be lower than they would be otherwise; health care
costs overall are going to be lower than they would be otherwise.”
Gruber’s
new reports are in direct contrast Obama’s words — and with claims Gruber
himself made in 2009. Then, the economics professor said that based on figures
provided by the independent Congressional Budget Office, “[health care] reform
will significantly reduce, not increase, non-group premiums.”
During
his presentation to Wisconsin officials in August 2011, Gruber revealed that
while about 57 percent of those who get their insurance through the individual
market will benefit in one way or another from the law’s subsides, an even
larger majority of the individual market will end up paying drastically more
overall.
“After
the application of tax subsidies, 59 percent of the individual market will
experience an average premium increase of 31 percent,” Gruber reported.
The
reason for this is that an estimated 40 percent of Wisconsin residents who are
covered by individual market insurance don’t meet the Affordable Care Act’s
minimum coverage requirements. Under the Affordable Care Act, they will be
required to purchase more expensive plans.
Asked
for his own explanation for the expected health-insurance rate hikes, Gruber
told TheDC that his reports “reflect the high cost of folding state high risk
pools into the [federal government's] exchange — without using the money the
state was already spending to subsidize those high risk pools.”
Gruber’s
Wisconsin presentation previously available on the website of Wisconsin’s
Office of Free Market Health Care, disappeared from the state government’s Web
servers shortly after Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker issued a Jan. 18 executive
order scrapping the agency’s mission.
Minnesotans
have already seen a 15 percent average rate increase because their state
government is spending approximately $100 million to subsidize those high-risk
pools. Gruber said they, too, will see a premium increase — even after
subsidies are factored in.
In
his presentaion there in November, he estimated 32 percent of Minnesotans will
face premiums hike similar to those of their neighbors in the Badger State.
In
his Colorado analysis, which he delivered last month, Gruber wrote that while
some may benefit from new tax credits folded into Obama’s health care overhaul,
“13 percent of people will still face a premium increase even after the
application of tax subsidies, and seven percent will see an increase of more
than ten percent.”
Sally
Pipes, president of the Pacific Research Institute in San Francisco, told TheDC
that the health care law’s mandates will ultimately result in far greater costs
across the board.
“If
[instead] we change the tax code and allow a competitive market to build, and
put doctors and patients in power, then that would really solve a lot of the
problem,” Pipes said.
Pipes
said she believes applying the Affordable Care Act, as written, will result in
care “being rationed and more expensive.”
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