RWJF report assesses the individual mandate in a new report
Posted on January 12, 2012 |
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Today the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) released a report authored by researchers from the Urban Institute called “Eliminating the Individual Mandate: Effects on Premiums, Coverage, and Uncompensated Care: Timely Analysis of Immediate Health Policy Issues.” The report examines the effect that eliminating the individual mandate—the requirement for most Americans to have health insurance or face a penalty—would have on health insurance coverage, spending, premiums and uncompensated care. Using the Urban Institute’s Health Insurance Policy Simulation Model, the researchers simulated the Affordable Care Act as enacted, as well as several alternative scenarios of health reform without the mandate.
The authors find that without the mandate:
1) Between 40 and 42 million would remain uninsured as opposed to 26 million with the mandate;
2) Private coverage would fall 11 million, covering 4 million fewer people than it would have without reform;
3) Uncompensated care spending would be much higher due to the increased number of uninsured; and
4) Individual premiums in the health benefit exchanges would increase by 10 percent in a scenario assuming high exchange participation, and by 25 percent with a low participation scenario.
The U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) has issued a report that examines ways to encourage individuals to voluntarily obtain health insurance. GAO was asked by Congress to undertake the report due to the chance "...that legislative or judicial action could result in a change to, or elimination of, the mandate..." and the report is based on multiple interviews from experts regarding alternative approaches to the individual mandate to purchase health insurance under the Affordable Care Act (ACA).





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