Posted on 03/24/2017 12:03:20 PM PDT by NobleFree
At some point, the House is expected to vote on the American Health Care Act (H.R. 1628), which would partially repeal and replace various components of Obamacare. The proposed legislation repeals a number of Obamacare provisions and contains several notable policy reforms, but the most important part of the AHCA is what it fails to include: a repeal of the regulatory architecture of Obamacare that is responsible for the rising cost of health care.
Title I of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (i.e., Obamacare) lays out a number of health insurance mandates and regulations that make up the regulatory architecture of Obamacare including guaranteed issue, community rating, essential health benefits, and actuarial value, among others. While the AHCA does repeal actuarial value and partially addresses community rating by moving the age rating ratio that Obamacare imposes from 3:1 to 5:1, the bill falls far short of comprehensively addressing the overall regulatory framework of Obamacare.
Obamacares creators designed this regulatory framework with the intent to take control of private health insurance plans and convert them into a highly regulated, quasi-public utility. As one of the laws supporters explained back in 2010, Obamacares design transforms health insurance into a public accommodation, and turns private health insurance into a regulated industry that, in its restructured form, will therefore take on certain characteristics of a public utility. It strains credibility to characterize this bill as repealing Obamacare when the mechanisms for the federal governments takeover of health care remain firmly in place.
Taken together, these mandates and regulations restrict consumer choice and drive up the cost of health care premiums by a national average of 44.5 to 68 percent. As Heritage Foundation Senior Policy Analyst in Simulations Drew Gonshorowski writes:
Overall, accounting for gender, age, and the relative proportions of all those groups, Americans are paying 44.5-68 percent more in premiums owing just to Title I regulations. That number is even higher when factoring all the other adverse effects of Obamacare. Obamacares Title I regulations bid up the price of premiums drastically for many Americans. While the current House bill begins to repeal Obamacare, it does not go far enough, as many of the most damaging regulations are left in place. Alleviating this pain should be strongly considered at every step of the process.
The AHCA would also subsidize that regulatory framework through new refundable tax credits aimed to help individuals buy their own health care plans plans that will remain highly regulated and overly expensive. There has already been political pressure to increase those credits, and that pressure will increase so long as premiums remain high.
As Heritage Foundation Senior Research Fellow in Health Policy Studies Edmund F. Haislmaier describes:
The key problem with the draft House health care bill is that it fails to correct the features of Obamacare that drove up health insurance costs. Instead, it mainly tweaks Obamacares financing and subsidy structure. Basically, the bill focuses on protecting those who gained subsidized coverage through the laws exchange subsidies and Medicaid expansion, while failing to correct Obamacares misguided insurance regulations that drove up premiums for Americans buying coverage without government subsidies.
Yuval Levin, editor of National Affairs, explains that the AHCA is fundamentally different from previous Republican health care proposals, including the bill introduced by now-Secretary Tom Price, because it functions within the core insurance rules established by Obamacare, which means it cant really achieve most of the key aims of the conservative reforms it is modeled on.
Lawmakers cannot preserve Obamacares regulatory structure and claim to have repealed the law. Without including the repeal of these regulations in the AHCA, congressional Republicans will have failed to keep their seven-year old promise to fully repeal Obamacare and health insurance costs will likely continue to increase leading up to the 2018 elections.
House Republican Leadership claims the AHCA is only phase one of a three-part plan to repeal and replace Obamacare. In phase two, Human Health and Services (HHS) Secretary Tom Price will take action to address the Obamacare insurance mandates and regulations. In phase three, Republicans will pass any additional reforms they failed to achieve in phase one and two. Unfortunately it isnt that simple. All executive action in phase two is limited, temporary, and will likely face serious legal challenges. All legislative action in phase three will require 60 votes in the Senate, including eight Democrat votes, a nearly insurmountable obstacle for Republicans to overcome.
Thankfully, Republicans in Congress have the legislative tool necessary budget reconciliation to fully repeal Obamacares regulations and avoid the political and policy complications contained within phase two and three. Some Republicans have argued Congress cannot repeal Obamacares insurance mandates and regulations contained in Title I through budget reconciliation because it does not have a clear budgetary impact. This is somewhat surprising considering the AHCA includes some regulatory changes while leaving others out. Regardless, this argument ignores the reality that Obamacares regulatory architecture imposes significant costs on taxpayers and is inseparable from the rest of the law. A January 2017 Congressional Budget Office (CBO) report left little doubt that Obamacares regulatory regime has budget implications.
As one former Senate staffer wrote:
To argue that their budgetary impact is merely incidental to the rest of the law is absurd on its face. Even the Obama administration made this very argument before the Supreme Court in King v. Burwell, arguing forcefully that the regulations are inseparable from the rest of the law. Predicated on that alone, Congress has a case that full repeal through budget reconciliation is viable.
The Wall Street Journal editorial board describes the two managers amendments released Monday night as mostly modest, which is true because they do nothing to repeal the regulatory architecture of Obamacare.
Republicans promised to fully repeal Obamacare, campaigned on full repeal since 2010, and voted more than 60 times to repeal parts or all of the disastrous health care law. The American people rewarded Republicans for their promise to repeal Obamacare by giving them a united government for the first time in more than a decade. An unwillingness to pursue repeal of Obamacares Title I insurance regulations through reconciliation based on a narrow interpretation of budget rules is not acceptable.
Unless repeal of Obamacares regulatory regime is included in the AHCA, the bill deserves to be defeated because it would leave the architecture of Obamacare in place and ensure health insurance premiums remain far too high.
Then-Representative Mike Pences description of his 2003 vote against the Bush-era prescription drug program resonates still today: House conservatives faced a difficult choice: oppose the president we love, or support the expansion of the big government we hate. Voting against a leadership-crafted bill was not a sign of disloyalty, but of true loyalty to principle, Pence explained at the time. That same principle remains true today.
Heritage Action opposes H.R. 1628 and will include it as a key vote on our legislative scorecard.
After all of the GOP lies about repealing Obamacare and having an awesome replacement plan, why in the world would you believe them about phase 2 & 3 down the road?
I trust the President. He will make it happen!
I’m assuming you were born and bred in the USA.
You were fortunate enough to enjoy a country that was strong, free, and civil. The rule of law and common decency prevailed.
We are fighting for the kind of freedom and liberty you once enjoyed and may even have taken for granted. The government encroachment on our life, liberty, and property is beyond what most of us imagined only 15 years ago.
Agreed - and Trump in the man to get the job done. He needs our backing.
Ryan is a RINO and not loyal to Republicans, to tea party or whatever subgroup of conservatives you want to consider. What more needs to be said?
ping
I believe you’ve missed the point.
“Trump in the man to get the job done. He needs our backing.”
I’ll back him whenever he’s doing the right thing, which I expect will be most of the time. RINOcare was not the right thing.
Meh. He’s just been designated to take all the blame.
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