Trump
administration says Obamacare plan premiums to fall
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[October 23, 2019]
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Monthly premiums for
an average 2020 Obamacare health insurance plan will fall about 4
percent from this year, according to a report released Tuesday by the
Trump administration, which has tried to dismantle the program.
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The Trump administration has cut back on funding for the health
insurance program, which was created by President Barack Obama as
part of the Affordable Care Act and is often called Obamacare, and
has sought to overturn it in Congress and legal courts. Obamacare
provides needs-based subsidies to help low-income people buy health
insurance.
The administration has removed the mandate that Americans have
health insurance or pay a fee. It also has allowed insurers to start
selling insurance that does not have as many benefits as the
Obamacare plans, which guarantee a certain level of coverage.
The average monthly premium for a 27-year-old who buys the benchmark
"silver" plan will be $388 per month, down from $406 in 2019, the
government said in its annual report on the program.
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The biggest declines include 20 percent in Delaware, 15 percent in
North Dakota and a 14 percent drop in Oklahoma. Wyoming remains the
most expensive state, with a premium of $723 per month while New
Mexico is the cheapest at $282 per month, both for a 27-year-old.
The total number of issuers will rise to 175 from 155 this year and
two states will have a single issuer in 2020, down from five in 2019
and 10 in 2018.
The premium data applies to the 39 states that use the federally run
HealthCare.gov website, where enrollment is between Nov 1 and Dec
15. The other states and Washington D.C. run their own online sites
for these plans.
(Reporting by Caroline Humer in New York and Julie Steenhuysen in
Chicago; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)
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