Every year, all of the health wonks scream from the rooftops that it is critical that people who bought their insurance on the Exchange go and actively shop. The Exchanges would eventually automatically renew people into the same or similar coverage but that mechanism could produce significant cost shocks as the relationship of the same plan to the subsidy Benchmark could change. Actively shopping removes the surprise.
This year it is even more critical. The threat that Cost Sharing Reduction Subsidies may or may not be paid has led to insurers and states adopting three basic strategies. Some are ignoring the threat and pricing their premiums in the normal fashion. Other states may be allowing insurers to spread their CSR costs across all plans. Finally, quite a few states that Charles Gaba is tracking will allow insurers to put all of the CSR costs onto the Silver plans.
As I explained last week, this produces weird stuff:
Bronze, Gold, and Platinum plans saw their premiums increase by the normal trend of increasing price per unit of medical care, the number of units bought and other normal factors. Silver plans were different. They also had the normal price increases but then the insurer added a twenty five to thirty percent charge on top of the normal premium to calculate the actual premium.
This produces a pricing order from least expensive to most expensive of Bronze, Gold, Silver, Platinum.
Gold plans are better deals than Silver plans for anyone who makes between 200% and 400% Federal Poverty Line as the out of pocket expenses and post-subsidy premiums are lower. Below is the pricing example of a single insurer in part of New Mexico:
Gold is way cheaper than Silver and dominate Silver on cost sharing for this group of people. However, the auto-renewal logic is set by rule. The 2017 rule is still the operational guidance. The rules try very hard to keep the person in the same metal band that they bought the previous year for the next year. Eventually there is wiggle room for odd-cases but most Silver buyers will be auto-renewed into Silver even if Silver is now a dominated plan.
The system change effort for this problem is to notify the exchange regulators so that they tweak their assignment systems so that if an individual makes more than 200% and less than 400% FPL and if that individual had a 2017 Silver Plan and if they live in a Silver Load state where Silver is more expensive than Gold, to move the person to Gold as the first option. This is CMS for 38 states and the state based marketplaces for 12 states.
The individual level effort is to actively shop for your own plan. You are going to get a much better deal by going to Gold if you live in a Silver Load state. Take 20 minutes and make sure that you are not buying a dominated plan.