On Tuesday, Golden State small businesses and their employees got
some great news: two of the state’s largest insurers will have to give
them over $36 million in insurance rebates because of an Obamacare consumer protection.
The health law forces insurers to spend at least 80 percent
of the premiums they charge on paying for actual medical services,
rather than administrative overhead or profits. That means more money
for ordinary consumers — and less for profitable insurance companies.
The so-called “80/20 rule” put $1.5 billion back into Americans’ pockets in 2011 alone. The average rebate was $151 per family
across all insurance markets, and in states where insurers blatantly
gouged prices, average rebates topped a whopping $500 per family.
Now, the benefits for Californians with small business health plans
are beginning to materialize. Blue Shield of California will be forced to pay back $24.5 million in rebates. Anthem Blue Cross will have to pay back another $12 million.
While cheering the latest numbers as a victory for California small
businesses and their employees, consumer advocates argue that the
insurance industry should try harder to proactively lower costs for
companies and individuals.
“Health insurers should work to cut upfront premiums rather than reimburse consumers afterward,” said
Jon Fox, consumer advocate at the California Public Interest Research
Group Education Fund, in an interview with the Los Angeles Times.
“Millions of dollars in rebates are a clear sign that health insurers
are overcharging consumers.”
Large insurers like Anthem Blue Cross have tried their best to circumvent
Obamacare protections like the 80/20 rule by threatening outlandish
premium rate hikes. The health law requires state insurance regulators
to review any premium hike request above 10 percent, but it leaves the
decision of whether or not reject those rates with the states. Although
37 states can negotiate or reject insurers’ rates, some large-population
states — including California — can’t.
Still, any rate hikes imposed by insurers will be held accountable to
the 80/20 rule. Financial gimmicks may give insurers a short turn
profit — but it’s one they’ll have to give right back to consumers.
Insurance companies aren’t the only ones who aren’t huge fans of this
consumer protection. Last September, the Republican-led House Energy
and Commerce Committee’s Health Subcommittee passed H.R. 1206,
which would have repealed the 80/20 rule and amounted to a massive
premium hike for over 13 million Americans. The Congressional Budget
Office (CBO) estimated that the bill would also increase the federal deficit by $531 million in the next four years.
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