© 2024 Blue Ridge Public Radio
Blue Ridge Mountains banner background
Your source for information and inspiration in Western North Carolina.
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Federal Researchers Connect Medicaid Expansion To Lower Premiums

healthcare.gov

The Obama administration is touting a new argument for why states like North Carolina should expand Medicaid. Federal researchers found in states that already have, the premiums people pay on the Obamacare exchanges are lower.

The Affordable Care Act was designed to cover the poorest people through Medicaid expansion, but the U.S. Supreme Court made that optional for states. North Carolina is among about 20 that chose not to. The new report shows that on the exchanges in those states, premiums are about 7 percent higher. 

"What this study shows is that Medicaid expansion works to keep prices down for middle-income people who buy coverage on healthcare.gov," says Ben Wakana, press secretary for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. 

healthcare.gov

To be clear, we're just talking about people on the exchange, not the much larger population covered through work.  

Here's the reason for the price difference:

In expansion states, there are very few people who make right around 100 percent of the federal poverty level and get insurance through the exchange. They don't need to – they're now eligible for Medicaid. 

But in states that didn't expand, Wakana says those people make up roughly 40 percent of the exchange market. 

"And what research has demonstrated over the years is that low-income individuals on average have a little bit poorer health status than those with higher incomes," he says.

The way health insurance works, the more sick people you insure, the higher the premiums need to be to cover their medical costs.

The resulting price difference makes sense to Sara Rosenbaum, a health law professor at George Washington University.

"You essentially shift some of the risky population from Medicaid to the exchange in states that don't expand Medicaid," she says.

Whether those poorer, sicker people are on Medicaid or the exchange doesn't make much of a difference for who picks up their tab. That's because the federal government offers large subsidies on the exchange.

Copyright 2016 WFAE

Michael Tomsic became a full-time reporter for WFAE in August 2012. Before that, he reported for the station as a freelancer and intern while he finished his senior year at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Heââ
Michael Tomsic
Michael Tomsic covers health care, voting rights, NASCAR, peach-shaped water towers and everything in between. He drivesWFAE'shealth care coverage through a partnership with NPR and Kaiser Health News. He became a full-time reporter forWFAEin August 2012. Before that, he reported for the station as a freelancer and intern while he finished his senior year at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He interned with Weekends on All Things Considered in Washington, D.C., where he contributed to the show’s cover stories, produced interviews withNasand BranfordMarsalis, and reported a story about a surge of college graduates joining the military. AtUNC, he was the managing editor of the student radio newscast, Carolina Connection. He got his start in public radio as an intern withWHQRin Wilmington, N.C., where he grew up.
Related Content