Updates
April 17, 2016:
UnitedHealth will exit Michigan.
UnitedHealth Group Inc. plans to
exit a third state Obamacare market as the insurer works to stem losses
from its struggling Affordable Care Act business.
The insurer
won’t sell policies through Michigan’s ACA exchange for next year,
according to Andrea Miller, a spokeswoman for the state’s Department of
Insurance and Financial Services. Georgia and Arkansas said last week
that UnitedHealth will quit their exchanges for 2017.
UnitedHealth,
the largest U.S. health insurer, began warning in November that it was
losing money on its Obamacare policies and might exit some markets. The
ACA relies on private health-insurance companies to offer policies that
individuals can buy in government-run markets. Though it was selling
plans in many states, UnitedHealth is a smaller player in ACA markets
than rivals like Aetna Inc. and Anthem Inc.
Original Post
The Hill is reporting that ObamaCare losses are unsustainable.
Health insurance companies are amplifying their warnings about the
financial sustainability of the ObamaCare marketplaces as they seek
approval for premium increases next year.
Insurers say they are
losing money on their ObamaCare plans at a rapid rate, and some have
begun to talk about dropping out of the marketplaces altogether. [United Health, the nation's largest healthcare insurer, has announced it will drop out.]
“Something has to give,” said Larry Levitt, an expert on the health law
at the Kaiser Family Foundation. “Either insurers will drop out or
insurers will raise premiums.”
While analysts expect the market to
stabilize once premiums rise and more young, healthy people sign up,
some observers have not ruled out the possibility of a collapse of the
market, known in insurance parlance as a “death spiral.”
In the
short term, there is a growing likelihood that insurers will push for
substantial premium increases, creating a political problem for
Democrats in an election year.
Insurers have been pounding the drum about problems with ObamaCare pricing.
The
Blue Cross Blue Shield Association released a widely publicized report
last month that said new enrollees under ObamaCare had 22 percent higher
medical costs than people who received coverage from employers.
And a report from
McKinsey & Company found that in the individual market, which
includes the ObamaCare marketplaces, insurers lost money in 41 states in
2014, and were only profitable in 9 states.
“We continue to have serious concerns about the sustainability of the public exchanges,” Mark Bertolini, the CEO of Aetna, said in February.
The
Aetna CEO noted concerns about the “risk pool,” which refers to the
balance of healthy and sick enrollees in a plan. The makeup of the
ObamaCare risk pools has been sicker and costlier than insurers hoped.
The
clearest remedy for the losses is for insurers to raise premiums,
perhaps by large amounts — something Republicans have long warned would
happen under the healthcare law, known as the Affordable Care Act (ACA).
“The industry is clearly setting the stage for bigger premium increases in 2017,” said Levitt of the Kaiser Family Foundation.
Insurers
will begin filing their proposed premium increases for 2017 soon. State
regulators will review those proposals and then can either accept or
reject them.
Michael Taggart, a consultant with S&P Dow Jones
Indices, pointed to data from his firm showing per capita costs for
insurers are spiking in the ObamaCare marketplaces.
“We made a
significant change in the rules with the ACA, and we're still working
through the process to see how that market stabilizes,” Taggart said at a
panel on Wednesday. “Is [a death spiral] a possibility? Sure it's a
possibility. I wouldn't attempt to put a probability on it, because I
think there are a lot of things going on.”
One factor helping to
prevent a death spiral is ObamaCare's tax credits, which cushion the
impact of premium increases on consumers.
“What we're likely to
see is more of a market correction than any kind of death spiral,”
Levitt said. “There are enough people enrolled at this point that the
market is sustainable. The premiums were just too low.”
As I've said before: by any measure ObamaCare is a debacle. Anyone still supporting ObamaCare
is a) not paying attention; b) is a bit dull-witted; c) is making money
off the scam; d) is a political demagogue; and/or e) is gaming the
system.
One can suggest that the health care insurers are exaggerating the situation, but United Health, the nation's largest insurer has already dropped out of ObamaCare; others will follow.
But the fact that the largest or second largest (competes with Boston Consulting) consultant company and the most prestigious consultant company, McKinsey & Company,
found that in the individual market, which
includes the ObamaCare marketplaces, insurers lost money in 41 states in
2014, and were only profitable in 9 states.
Unsustainable.
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The Exodus Is Beginning
Speaking of unsustainable: Los Angeles and a $15-minimum wage: the exodus has begun.
The Los Angeles Times is reporting:
Los Angeles was once the epicenter of apparel manufacturing,
attracting buyers from across the world to its clothing factories,
sample rooms and design studios.
But over the years, cheap
overseas labor lured many apparel makers to outsource to foreign
competitors in far-flung places such as China and Vietnam.
Now, Los Angeles firms are facing another big hurdle — California's
minimum wage hitting $15 an hour by 2022 — which could spur more
garment makers to exit the state.
Last week American Apparel, the
biggest clothing maker in Los Angeles, said it might outsource the
making of some garments to another manufacturer in the U.S., and wiped out about 500 local jobs. The company still employs about 4,000 workers in Southern California.
"The exodus has begun," said Sung Won Sohn, an economist at Cal State
Channel Islands and a former director at Forever 21. "The garment
industry is gradually shrinking and that trend will likely continue."
In
the last decade, local apparel manufacturing has already thinned
significantly. Last year, Los Angeles County was home to 2,128 garment
makers, down 33% from 2005, according to Bureau of Labor Statistics
data. During that period, employment also plunged by a third, to 40,500
workers. Wages, meanwhile, jumped 17% adjusting for inflation, to $698
per week — although that can include pay for top executives, as well as
bonuses, tips and paid vacation time.
Many apparel companies say
Los Angeles is a difficult place to do business. Commercial real estate
is expensive and limited, the cost of raw materials continues to rise
and it can be difficult to find skilled workers who can afford to live
in the city. They expect things will become even more challenging after
the minimum-wage hike further raises their expenses.
Close reading of the story suggests that the $15-minimum-wage is simply the last straw. The apparel industry was already on its way out. It's all for "the better." Those that have jobs will be paid more. The state will take care of the others. Bernie will see to it that no one is left behind.
***************************************
Bill Nye, The Science Guy, May Miss His Connecting Flight
Weather channel is now reporting:
- 458 flights now cancelled at Denver International Airport due to coming snowstorm -- this is mid-April.
******************************
Barack and Michelle: 19%
Headline: the couple pay $81K on $436K in income. 19%.
Not to be outdone: Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders' tax return shows he gave 4% of income to charity,
effective federal tax rate is 13.4%.