Re: revolution in the us of a?
Forget Dungar's cherrypicked op-ed. Just read the report he referenced (keeping in mind how incomplete it is with only 39 states providing data). It's not all roses (and the $2500 savings are nowhere in sight, but you're okay with that lie since it came from the great messiah who you defend no matter what): Exchanges year 2: New findings and ongoing trends | McKinsey on Healthcare
What's missing is the kind of rate increases experienced after many were forced onto the exchange in 2014. This is wonderful news only to those who subscribe to the one-size-fits-all theory. For some it makes sense to pay out of pocket and to negotiate with their providers. The mandate removes that option. I hate it 1000000 times as much as I did in 2010.
Forget Dungar's cherrypicked op-ed. Just read the report he referenced (keeping in mind how incomplete it is with only 39 states providing data). It's not all roses (and the $2500 savings are nowhere in sight, but you're okay with that lie since it came from the great messiah who you defend no matter what): Exchanges year 2: New findings and ongoing trends | McKinsey on Healthcare
We elicited five key observations from our analyses:
- Competition and choice are increasing nationwide. In most counties, consumers shopping for coverage on the 2015 public exchanges have more carriers and more products from which to choose. Nationwide, the number of carriers participating on the exchanges has increased 19 percent since the 2014 OEP, and the number of products has increased 27 percent.
- Gross premium prices are rising, especially for PPO and broad-network products. Between the 2014 and 2015 OEPs, gross premiums of the lowest-price exchange products rose by a median of 6 percent across metal tiers.3 Among the lowest-price 2014 exchange products re-filed for 2015, the median gross premium increase is 10 percent. Premiums for re-filed products built on health maintenance organizations (HMOs), narrowed networks, or both increased much less than did the premiums for products based on preferred provider organizations (PPOs) or broad networks.
- Switching products would minimize or eliminate premium increases in many cases, but would not always lower overall costs. We estimate close to three-quarters of 2014 exchange enrollees have access this year to a product that is within the same metal tier as the product they bought last year but priced below the 2015 premium of last year’s plan. Often, however, the lower-premium products have higher deductibles.4
- Net premiums for subsidy-eligible consumers have often risen. Net premiums for the lowest-price silver products have increased for nearly three-quarters of those eligible for subsidies, but in most cases the increases are less than 10 percent.
- Recent and new entrants are often price leaders. Just over half of new price leaders are either recent or new entrants (i.e., carriers that entered the individual exchange market in one or more states last year or this year). In many counties, there is a significant change in competitive price positions.
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