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Health Insurance Costs Unmanageable for Most Americans

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  • Health Insurance Costs Unmanageable for Most Americans

    Open enrollment in the 39 states that use the federal HealthCare.gov insurance exchange looks like it will end with a whimper this Saturday. Through the first month, sign-ups are down 11 percent compared to the same period last year.

    It's easy to see why. The cost of insurance is unmanageable for many middle-class Americans.

    ObamaCare's very structure is to blame for the high cost of exchange coverage. For one, all health plans must cover 10 essential health benefits, even though some of them – like maternity care and substance-abuse treatment – are by no means necessary for every person. Providing such generous coverage is expensive.

    Insurers also can't offer discounts to healthy individuals; they must charge people of the same age in the same region the same amount, irrespective of health status or history.

    And premiums for older people can be no more than three times what they are for young people, despite the fact that claims costs for the elderly are about five times higher than for the young. So insurers have to raise premiums across the board to cover their costs.

    In Nebraska, the average benchmark premium more than tripled, from $249 in 2014 to $838 in 2019. The average premium in Iowa ballooned from $253 to $762.

    Those with the lowest incomes – up to 138 percent of the federal poverty level, or about $12,000 for an individual – don’t have to worry about these price surges because they have access to Medicaid. But middle-income Americans have been walloped by these price hikes, and this year will be no better.

    ObamaCare tried to help the middle class pay for insurance by providing premium subsidies to those who make up to four times the federal poverty level – just over $100,000 for a family of four. But those subsidies often aren't enough.

    Consider a family of four in McLean, Virginia, with an annual income of $90,000 – $100,00 ($90,000 less than the median household income in that area). With the help of a monthly tax credit of about $1,000, those who select the most affordable plan available through HealthCare.gov will pay monthly premiums just north of $350.

    Not terrible, right? But the plan's deductible is $14,000. In other words, that family could fork over 14 percent of its yearly income in out-of-pocket costs before their insurer pays any expenses.

    Middle-class families earning just enough to make them ineligible for any subsidies fare even worse. Imagine that same Northern Virginia community, with an identical family that's making $101,000 per year. That family doesn't get a subsidy. Its estimated monthly premium starts at nearly $1,400, and its annual deductible is $14,000. If the family wanted a plan without a deductible, the monthly premium would exceed $2,000.

    Families all over the country are facing similar predicaments. A family of three in Cheyenne, Wyoming, with an annual income of $84,000, makes slightly more than the cut-off for receiving subsidies. Its cheapest premium option is almost $1,300 per month – about 20 percent of its total income. And the deductible is $9,000.

    In a worst-case scenario, that family will spend more than $24,000 before its insurance kicks in. That’s nearly 30 percent of its pay for the whole year.

    The Trump administration is trying to make more affordable insurance options available. It has promulgated new rules allowing insurers to sell short-term health insurance plans that last up to 364 days, and to renew those plans for up to three years.

    Short-term plans don't have to adhere to ObamaCare's cost-inflating regulations, so they have lower premiums – 80 percent lower, on average, than ObamaCare-compliant plans.

    In 2019, enrollment on HealthCare.gov will almost certainly decline for the third straight year. ObamaCare's exchanges have failed to provide the affordable health coverage that middle-class Americans are clamoring for. Short-term plans may be their refuge.

  • #2
    By "Affordable Heath Care" they meant more of, "Hey let's punish Americans for working hard by raising how much they have to pay for HEALTH INSURANCE. What a disgusting thing for the government to do but they've been at it for a decade now. Good to see it finally dying down.

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    • #3
      I love how they use words that are the opposite of the bill they pass. Like "Affordable Healthcare Act" or "Patriot Act" nothing affordable or patriotic by either piece of legislation.

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      • #4
        Just one more broken Obama promise.

        Did anyone really think they would see a $2500 per savings? Anybody??

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        • #5
          Originally posted by 1bad65 View Post
          Just one more broken Obama promise.

          Did anyone really think they would see a $2500 per savings? Anybody??
          When Trump does tax cuts at the very least it will not hurt the average American at all, and at the very best it will help them out big time.

          With Obamacare you hurt majority of Americans and only help out those who are already getting help.

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          • #6
            Originally posted by 1bad65 View Post
            Just one more broken Obama promise.

            Did anyone really think they would see a $2500 per savings? Anybody??
            And no one was calling that $2,500 "crumbs" either.

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            • #7
              Originally posted by JimRaynor View Post
              When Trump does tax cuts at the very least it will not hurt the average American at all, and at the very best it will help them out big time.

              With Obamacare you hurt majority of Americans and only help out those who are already getting help.
              Exactly.

              That's why I laugh when I see all these superfans saying they didnt get tax cuts.

              They just admitted that either they dont work, or they dont make enough money for it to be taxed (or they fall in that small group of upper bracket taxpayers who were moved to a higher bracket.)


              I'm middle class, I got a couple thousand more a year back.

              These guys here claiming to be 6 figure guys, business owners, financially independent, etc, should be seeing much bigger tax cuts than me.

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              • #8
                Originally posted by GhostofDempsey View Post
                And no one was calling that $2,500 "crumbs" either.
                Lmfao!!!

                Well played, sir.

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                • #9
                  Originally posted by JimRaynor View Post
                  I love how they use words that are the opposite of the bill they pass. Like "Affordable Healthcare Act" or "Patriot Act" nothing affordable or patriotic by either piece of legislation.
                  And how they put bull**** inside of other bills so that it slides under the radar.

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                  • #10
                    Make $0 per year and your health care is completely paid. You walk in, flash a card, no questions asked.

                    Free health care for drug dealers, I guess. I don't know who else reports a household income of $0 per year.

                    Get a job making $20k a year and "Shame on you, privileged racist capitalist". Disqualified, kicked off of everything, offered a bunch of ****-tier plans that won't pay for themselves unless it's terminal.

                    Crude, governmental "equality" works its magic yet again.
                    Last edited by ////; 12-13-2018, 08:08 PM.

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