Eight States Are Facing Double-Digit Health Insurance Premium Hikes In 2015

M

miles

Guest
You mean they lied to us?
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Federal and state officials have kept fairly quiet about Obamacare premiums in the days before the health law’s next open enrollment period, but one thing’s for sure: rates are going up this year.

A PricewaterhouseCoopers report on all individual market premiums — on and off Obamacare exchanges — found a large range of rate changes, from a drastic 35 percent hike in Colorado to a 22 percent cut, also in Colorado (the state’s Obamacare exchange changed the geographic rating areas this year to cut costs for ski resort towns). Overall, the average rate hike nationwide is 5.6 percent, according to PWC.

First, all that information isn’t set in stone. Most states haven’t compiled final premium information for the Obamacare exchange. Just seven states — Colorado, Maryland, New York, Ohio, Oregon and Vermont — and Washington, D.C. have made final rate announcements. Of course, the states that did publish final rates had more reason to want the data out there — they had a lower average hike of 3.5 percent.

But the number of big losers is far outweighing the winners. Eight states are facing double-digit rate hikes, while just four states have reported decreases.

Louisiana and Kansas are facing Obamacare premium hikes of more than 15 percent on average. Iowa, Pennsylvania, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina and Tennessee will see rate lower double-digit rate hikes as well.

Connecticut, Rhode Island and Oregon reported rate decreases of one to two percent, according to PWC. But Mississippi — hailed by Politico earlier this month as the state Obamacare left behind — has the single largest premium decrease at 9.3 percent.

The data is incomplete, as well: Arkansas included its private-option Medicaid plan in its data, for one; Oregon only reported rate changes for one silver level plan for a single, 40-year-old nonsmoker — someone who’s likely to have lower insurance costs in the first place.

And it doesn’t include information from Alaska, Hawaii, Texas, North Dakota or Massachusetts. Alaska alone has some of the highest rate hikes on Obamacare exchanges in the country — Premera Blue Cross is upping rates between 35 and 40 percent and Moda Health by between 22 and 29 percent.

There are a number of other complicating factors — some states don’t require reporting of off-exchange rate changes; other states only require reporting of larger premium hikes; and the on-and-off-exchange pools are still in flux.

Some states have cut off plans that aren’t compliant with Obamacare; others haven’t. Some insurers have cut off the plans themselves, hoping to push healthier customers into their exchange pools instead.

All in all, unless states issue final reports or the Department of Health and Human Services, which reviews exchange plans, issues a comprehensive report, there may not be a complete picture of what’s happening in Obamacare exchanges or in the individual health insurance market outside of them.
 
Who will be the first Cricket to chirp "millions of people who previously had no insurance are now covered."

My money is on Johnny Savage.
 
Fucking lying RWers hooked on FAUX!!!

In four state they're going down by single digits!

:mad:

;)

What's that? Ah -- Co-pays? Don't talk about -- Co-pays?! You kidding me?! Co-pays?! I just hope we can win an election! Another election!
Jim "Hussein" Mora

:p
 
You people are thinking entirely to linearly. You have to realize that it is not a line it is a cost curve and they bent it down in an entirely other-worldly direction.
 
No Progressive Republicans allowed!

Juan Williams wasn't even allowed to stay...

The big lesson for me [working at NPR] was the intolerance of so-called liberals. I say intolerance because I grew up as a black Democrat in Brooklyn, N.Y., and always thought it was the Archie Bunker Republicans who practiced intolerance. My experience at NPR revealed to me how rigid liberals can be when their orthodoxy is challenged. I was the devil for simply raising questions, offering a different viewpoint, not shutting my mouth about the excesses of liberalism — a bad guy, a traitor to the cause.
Juan Williams
 
y=f(nx*2) + $17 Trillion

Laughs.

I laugh more at the mathematically challenged people that claim it is even remotely possibly that there could be a net savings from the scheme. You don't have to even consider the cost shifting or who gets care where and by whom.

Thomas Sowell cut his teeth looking at the idiocy of Government Economics.

He said to the effect that if you think healthcare is two expensive, how would healthcare plus a big expensive bureaucracy be less expensive?
 
Who will be the first Cricket to chirp "millions of people who previously had no insurance are now covered."

My money is on Johnny Savage.

The truth hurts, Judenazi.

The unemployed and underemployed wheezin' geezers here are still bitter than poor folks now have the same access to health care that they take for granted.
 
The unemployed and underemployed wheezin' geezers here are still bitter than poor folks now have the same access to health care that they take for granted.


So this is the new mantra?

What happened to "you loose... America won"
 
Does anyone else think it's funny that LyingPigDownSouth rags on the unemployed while he posts here all day long?
 
Does anyone else think it's funny that LyingPigDownSouth rags on the unemployed while he posts here all day long?

I thought he was getting paid by the DNC to combat their enemies...

:eek: :eek: :eek:

... his mentor, lavy, used to do it as pro bono.
 
y=f(nx*2) + $17 Trillion

I'm pretty sure that folks are mad enough that the overall rates are increasing. What they fail to realize is that those increases are for a single year. The increases are cumulatively more like compound interest and it's not going to be long before someone plots the increases out on a graph.

I think we finally found the "Hockey Stick."

Ishmael
 
I'm pretty sure that folks are mad enough that the overall rates are increasing. What they fail to realize is that those increases are for a single year. The increases are cumulatively more like compound interest and it's not going to be long before someone plots the increases out on a graph.

I think we finally found the "Hockey Stick."

Ishmael

lmao

Where's Frodo now?
 
I'm pretty sure that folks are mad enough that the overall rates are increasing. What they fail to realize is that those increases are for a single year. The increases are cumulatively more like compound interest and it's not going to be long before someone plots the increases out on a graph.

I think we finally found the "Hockey Stick."

Ishmael

I'm sure they will equally pleased when they see their new deductibles. :D
 
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