Fight Over Premium Hikes Just Beginning

Fight Over Premium Hikes Just Beginning

Outrage over Anthem's proposed double-digit premium hikes played a crucial role in the health reform debate, but states' own efforts to curb premiums are sparking stand-offs across the nation. Critics say the showdowns foreshadow greater disputes over reform's implementation.

Insurers’ premiums played a key, if ironic, role in the waning moments of the national health reform debate. Outrage over Anthem Blue Cross’s proposed double-digit hike for individual policyholders was one of the factors that helped congressional Democrats gain momentum to pass reform. However, legislators failed to create a sought-after national authority that would regulate insurers’ premiums, as Democrats could not technically add the provision through the budget reconciliation process.

As a result, responsibility for regulating insurance remains with states, which means Anthem’s planned increases may well go through: California is among several dozen states that cannot reject insurers’ rates. However, a pair of Assembly members are backing a bill (AB 2578) that would add such authority.

According to co-sponsor Dave Jones (D-Sacramento), the bill draws on $250,000 available through reform legislation to set up state-level rate regulators and would force California insurers to get state approval for premium increases exceeding 7% annually. That threshold is based on projections that medical costs normally increase just 4% to 6% annually.

Although opposed by insurers and physicians — and reportedly California Insurance Commissioner Steve Poizner — the bill has passed a key committee and has the support of groups like AARP and labor unions.

Gaining rate-setting authority may expose California to new challenges. States’ efforts to curb premium hikes are meeting heavy resistance, with insurers from Rhode Island to Washington, D.C., saying that regulators are making decisions that threaten long-term solvency.

The most visible stand-off is in Massachusetts, where the state’s insurance commissioner rejected nearly 86% of insurers’ proposed premium hikes — the first time a Massachusetts commissioner has disapproved rates since gaining authority in 1977. Six of the state’s leading insurers are now suing to win a preliminary injunction that would allow them to increase rates.

A showdown also looms in Maine, where a court will soon rule on whether the state’s insurance superintendent acted within her authority last year when she blocked a proposed 18.5% premium increase for Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield policies in favor of a 10.9% increase. Insurers and officials nationwide are closely following the Maine case because “what happens in one state certainly has a ripple effect,” according to Sandy Praeger, Kansas’ insurance commissioner and chair of the National Association of Insurance Commissioners’ health insurance and managed care committee.

Insurers argue that capping rates isn’t the answer and that their expenses are increasing faster than premium hikes, as part of a broader cost spiral fueled by rising provider spending. Freezing premiums may result in private insurers or even the hospitals that depend on them declaring bankruptcy, according to Richard Epstein, a law professor at the University of Chicago.

Meanwhile, some suggest that officials’ rate rejections are motivated by populist anger and, in Massachusetts, a governor’s race that pits incumbent Gov. Deval Patrick (D) against a former health plan executive. However, state insurance commissioners contend that — in contrast to the 14 state attorneys general, who are challenging health reform’s constitutionality — politics aren’t part of the equation. “We didn’t get to vote on this bill. We’ll carry out the law,” Jane Cline, West Virginia’s insurance commissioner, said.

The commissioners note that they are slated to play key roles in rolling out reform measures and overseeing insurers’ efforts to meet new medical-loss ratios on spending, which means more confrontations with insurers lie ahead. Pending the outcome of AB 2578, California may soon join the fray.

State of the States

Tracking the Polls

Republican Response

Exit mobile version