"In Alaska, they've gone up 207 percent on Obamacare. You know, I used to mention only Arizona because they were up 116 percent in Arizona. Now Arizona is like good by comparison to some of the numbers. But they're way up in Arizona, also."– President Donald Trump, remarks at lunch with members of Congress, June 13
"Okay, so I have been saying all hundred and 116 percent for so long. That was Arizona. That was – so yesterday I have a new number – 204 percent in Alaska increase. It is a catastrophe."– President Trump, remarks at Faith and Freedom Coalition's conference, June 8
President Trump likes to talk about premium increases under the Affordable Care Act, or Obamacare. As Trump says, he used to point out Arizona as the extreme example of premium increases. But he is now using Alaska as a new example, where premiums soared more than 200 percent. Is that really the case?
The Facts
Alaska has high health-care costs in both the individual and employer markets for several reasons, including geography. Alaska is remote, so it's hard to attract doctors to work there. It's more rural, and towns are spread far apart, so it's logistically challenging to transport patients between hospitals.
The White House provided us a May 23, 2017, report by the Department of Health and Human Services, showing premium increases for the individual market. It shows the average national premium increased 105 percent from 2013 (before Obamacare's major provisions took effect) to 2017, from $232 to $476. In Alaska, the average monthly premium increased to $1,041 in 2017 from $344 in 2016 – a 203 percent increase. That is among the highest percentage increases reported between those two years.
But buried in one of the footnotes is a disclaimer that the data used in this report do not take into account premium tax credits. That's a big caveat.
State-by-state weighted average increases range from as low as single-digit increases to more than 100 percent. For 2017, the average increase in premiums before subsidies was 25 percent, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.
[Shifting funds from poor to rich is a key part of the Senate health bill]
The reason it's important to look at how people are affected after subsidies is that on average, eight out of 10 marketplace enrollees receive government premium subsidies, and they are protected from a premium increase (and may even see a decrease) if they stay with a low-cost plan.
Take, for example, premiums in the second-lowest silver plan. That's the most popular plan on the marketplace, and one that is used as the benchmark to calculate government subsidies. This Kaiser Family Foundation analysis shows that before the tax credit, the percentage change in 2016-2017 in the average cost of premiums for a 40-year-old nonsmoker varied widely by state. In Indiana, premiums declined by 2 percent, whereas Arizona saw a 145 percent increase.
But that's before tax credits, which, again, 80 percent of people receive in the marketplace. After tax credits, the same population saw a zero percent increase in premiums in both Indiana and Arizona, from 2016 to 2017. In Alaska, there was a 1 percent decrease in premiums for this population from 2016 to 2017.
In Alaska, 93 percent of marketplace enrollees receive tax credits, according to the Alaska Division of Insurance. So even though the average premium cost increased 203 percent from 2013 to 2017, most people on the exchanges are paying far less than they did in 2013 – that is, if they were able to buy insurance in 2013. (They might not have been able to obtain or afford health insurance because of a preexisting condition, but the ACA eliminated that restriction.)
In 2017, the 86 percent of people in the exchanges in Alaska who receive tax credits pay $93 per month, according to Kaiser Family Foundation. That's far less than the $344 they were paying in 2013.
Of course, some people make too much money to qualify for a subsidy. Right now about half of the people nationwide in the individual market are getting a subsidy – and the other half are being hit with increases, in some cases quite high. But, to put it in context, the number of people affected by premium increases is just one-fourteenth the size of the employment-based health-insurance market. The House and Senate Republican proposals would likely not solve this problem, as subsidies would likelier get skimpier or phase out at lower income levels.
Moreover, it's difficult to compare average health insurance premiums in the individual market before and after Obamacare. The number of people who qualify for health insurance, and the type of insurance they get, are much different under ACA than in 2013, prior to the change. One study found that, when adjusting for actuarial value to create an apples-to-apples comparison, individual-market premiums actually dropped after the introduction of the ACA.
The American Health Care Act, the House Republican plan to replace Obamacare, would actually reduce subsidies for those in lower income levels while expanding the eligibility to higher income groups. The Senate draft unveiled June 22 would adjust subsidies for the cost of health care in communities, but still would offer less than under the ACA; payments would be tied to the lowest category of coverage among the four tiers of health plans in ACA insurance marketplaces.
Through the state reinsurance program, insurers get reimbursed for high-cost enrollees. Alaska had two insurers in the exchange to begin with, in 2014. Now, there is only one insurer, Premera. But due to Alaska's reinsurance program, the state expects Premera to file for a state rate decrease in 2018, according to the state's Division of Insurance.
The Pinocchio Test
Trump cherry-picks the high end of premium increases by selecting Alaska's 203 percent increase, even though the average monthly premium across the country was up about 25 percent before subsidies. That places this claim firmly in the Two Pinocchio category.
But there are more problems. Trump uses the calculation of premium increases without incorporating the impact of tax credits – which most people in the exchanges receive. If you take the subsidies into account, the average monthly premium of most people in the individual market exchange goes down, not up. And it's an apples-to-oranges comparison by using figures from 2013 – before most major provisions of Obamacare had taken effect – and comparing them to ones from 2017. Trump earns Three Pinocchios.
3 Pinocchios
Significant factual error and/or obvious contradictions. Ratings explained.