The
fix, first proposed by the U.S. Treasury Department and the
Internal Revenue Service in April, addresses an element of the
healthcare law that left family members of those with access to
employer-provided health plans ineligible for certain subsidies.
"Now, the Treasury Department is finalizing that fix so that the
law works the way Congress intended and the cost of coverage
comes down for families all over the country. Starting next
month, Americans can sign up to take advantage of this change,"
President Joe Biden said in a White House statement.
"About 1 million Americans will either gain coverage or see
their insurance become more affordable as a result of the new
rule," he added.
The problem was that employer-based health plans have been
considered affordable as long as the coverage was within the
financial means of an employee, regardless of whether it was too
expensive for family members. As a result, the family members
were not eligible for the subsidies they may have needed, the
White House said.
The open enrollment period for health insurance plans under the
Affordable Care Act starts on Nov. 1.
Also known as Obamacare, the law helps low and middle-income
Americans who do not have access to affordable health insurance
coverage through an employer.
U.S. House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who like
Biden is a Democrat, said in a statement the fix will bring down
healthcare costs and expand access to affordable coverage.
Republicans say the remedy contradicts the text of the law and
that it will significantly increase spending on Obamacare plans.
They also say it would lead to a major shifting of people out of
employer-based plans and into government-subsidized ones.
(Reporting by Ahmed Aboulenein in Washington; Editing by Matthew
Lewis)
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