Health premiums could rise 17 pct for young adults
By CARLA K. JOHNSON (AP) – March 30, 2010
CHICAGO — Under the health care overhaul, young adults who buy their own
insurance will carry a heavier burden of the medical costs of older Americans —
a shift expected to raise insurance premiums for young people when the plan
takes full effect.
Beginning in 2014, most Americans will be required to buy insurance or pay a
tax penalty. That's when premiums for young adults seeking coverage on the
individual market would likely climb by 17 percent on average, or roughly $42 a
month, according to an analysis of the plan conducted for The Associated Press.
The analysis did not factor in tax credits to help offset the increase.
The higher costs will pinch many people in their 20s and early 30s who are
struggling to start or advance their careers with the highest unemployment rate
in 26 years.
Consider 24-year-old Nils Higdon. The self-employed percussionist and
part-time teacher in Chicago pays $140 each month for health insurance. But he's
healthy and so far hasn't needed it.
The law relies on Higdon and other young adults to shoulder more of the
financial load in new health insurance risk pools. So under the new system,
Higdon could expect to pay $300 to $500 a year more. Depending on his income, he
might also qualify for tax credits.
At issue is the insurance industry's practice of charging more for older
customers, who are the costliest to insure. The new law restricts how much
insurers can raise premium costs based on age alone.
Insurers typically charge six or seven times as much to older customers as to
younger ones in states with no restrictions. The new law limits the ratio to
3-to-1, meaning a 50-year-old could be charged only three times as much as a
20-year-old.
The rest will be shouldered by young people in the form of higher
premiums.
Higdon wonders how his peers, already scrambling to start careers during a
recession, will react to paying more so older people can get cheaper
coverage.
"I suppose it all depends on how much more people in my situation, who are
already struggling for coverage, are expected to pay," Higdon says. He'd prefer
a single-payer health care system and calls age-based premiums part of the
"broken morality" of for-profit health care.
To be sure, there are benefits that balance some of the downsides for young
people:
_ In roughly six months, many young adults up to age 26 should be eligible
for coverage under their parents' insurance — if their parents have insurance
that provides dependent coverage.
_ Tax credits will be available for individuals making up to four times the
federal poverty level, $43,320 for a single person. The credits will vary based
on income and premiums costs.
_ Low-income singles without children will be covered for the first time by
Medicaid, which some estimate will insure 9 million more young adults.
But on average, people younger than 35 who are buying their own insurance on
the individual market would pay $42 a month more, according to an analysis by
Rand Health, a research division of the nonpartisan Rand Corp.
The analysis, conducted for The Associated Press, examined the effect of the
law's limits on age-based pricing, not other ways the legislation might affect
premiums, said Elizabeth McGlynn of Rand Health.
Jim O'Connor, an actuary with the independent consulting firm Milliman Inc.,
came up with similar estimates of 10 to 30 percent increases for young males,
averaging about 15 percent.
"Young males will be hit the hardest," O'Connor says, because they have lower
health care costs than young females and older people who go to doctors more
often and use more medical services.
Predicting exactly how much any individual's insurance premium would rise or
fall is impossible, experts say, because so much is changing at once. But it is
possible to isolate the effect of the law's limits on age-based pricing.
Some groups predict even higher increases in premiums for younger individuals
— as much as 50 percent, says Landon Gibbs of ShoutAmerica, a Tennessee-based
nonprofit aimed at mobilizing young people on health care issues, particularly
rising costs.
Gibbs, 27, a former White House aide under President George W. Bush, founded
the bipartisan group with former hospital chain executive Clayton McWhorter, now
chairman of a private equity firm. McWhorter finances the organization. The
group did not oppose health care reform, but stressed issues like how health
care inflation threatens the future of Medicare.
"We don't want to make this a generational war, but we want to make sure
young adults are informed," Gibbs says.
Young people who supported Barack Obama in 2008 may come to resent how health
care reform will affect them, Gibbs and others say. Recent polls show support
among young voters eroding since they helped elect Obama president.
Jim Schreiber, 24, was once an Obama supporter but now isn't so sure. The
Chicagoan works in a law firm and has his own tea importing business.
He pays $120 a month for health insurance, "probably pure profit for my
insurance company," he says. Without a powerhouse lobbying group, like AARP for
older adults, young adults' voices have been muted, he says. He's been
discouraged by the health care debate.
"It has made me disillusioned with the Democrats," he said.
Ari Matusiak, 33, a Georgetown University law student, founded Young
Invincibles with other Obama campaign volunteers to rally youth support for
health care overhaul.
Age rating fails as a wedge issue because the pluses of the new law outweigh
the minuses for young adults, Matusiak says.
"And we're not going to be 26, 27, 33 forever," Matusiak says. "Guess what?
We're going to be in a different demographic soon enough."
Nationally representative surveys for the Kaiser Family Foundation have
consistently found that young adults are more likely than senior citizens to say
they would be willing to pay more so that more Americans could be insured. But
whether that generosity will endure isn't clear.
"The government approach of — we'll just make someone get health care and pay
for someone else — definitely NOT what I want," says Melissa Kaupke, 28, who is
uninsured and works from her Nashville home.
In Chicago, Higdon says he supports the principles of the health care
overhaul, even if it means he will pay more as a young man to smooth out premium
costs for everyone.
"Hopefully I'll be old someday, barring some catastrophic event. And the
likelihood of me being old is less if I don't have a good health plan."
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