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Obamacare 101: What’s in the House Republicans’ replacement plan?

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WASHINGTON — House Republicans have finally unveiled legislation to repeal and — just as important — replace the Affordable Care Act. Obamacare is pretty complex. So it shouldn’t be a …
WASHINGTON — House Republicans have finally unveiled legislation to repeal and — just as important — replace the Affordable Care Act.
Obamacare is pretty complex. So it shouldn’t be a surprise that what the GOP is proposing in its place has a few knotty details.
Here’s a short guide to what’s in the Republican plan and what it could mean for Americans’ health coverage.
Guaranteed coverage
How it works now: This part of Obamacare was revolutionary. The current guarantee allows Americans to get health insurance even if they’re sick. That put an end to insurers denying coverage to people who had pre-existing medical conditions.
Americans can get the guaranteed coverage even if they’ve been uninsured for years.
How it would change: The House GOP plan would still prohibit insurers from turning away sick consumers.
How it works now: Obamacare, for the first time, required Americans to have health insurance or pay a tax penalty.
The penalty is assessed annually when people file their taxes, though there are exemptions for people with low incomes or other hardships that make getting health insurance difficult.
How it would change: The tax penalty is eliminated. But the House Republican bill still penalizes people who don’t get insurance.
If consumers allow coverage to lapse for as long as two months, insurers would be required to charge them a 30 percent penalty when they buy a health plan.
That penalty could discourage many people from getting new coverage if they lose their plan because of a job loss or other change. That could increase the number of uninsured Americans.
How it works now: For decades, being a poor adult in America often meant not having health insurance.
That’s because Medicaid, the 50-year-old government safety net health plan, historically limited coverage to select groups of low-income Americans. These included children, pregnant women, the disabled and the elderly.
Poor adults without children were barred from Medicaid coverage in most states.
Obamacare tried to change that by offering states billions of dollars to expand Medicaid to childless adults. Thirty-one states have done so.
That has helped millions of low-income Americans get health coverage over the last several years.
How it would change: The House GOP plan would make two big changes to the Medicaid program.
First, starting in 2020, it would phase out the additional federal money that has helped states expand their Medicaid programs.
The legislation would then eliminate the decades-old system that linked federal aid to states to how much medical care Medicaid enrollees used.
The GOP plan would instead cap how much aid the federal government provides states for Medicaid under a system called a “per capita cap.”
That means the federal government would give each state a fixed amount of money every year for every person who qualifies for Medicaid. That amount then would increase annually by an amount linked to the medical inflation rate.
Many advocates and medical groups fear that over time that change would force states to scale back coverage for poor people and limit medical services.
How it works now: The Obamacare marketplaces, such as HealthCare.gov, enable people who don’t get health benefits at work to compare plans, just as they might compare hotel rooms or airline tickets online.
Importantly, all plans on the marketplaces must offer a basic set of benefits, such as hospital care, mental health services and prescription drugs.
The plans cannot impose annual or lifetime limits on coverage, a once-common practice.
And insurers are barred from charging older consumers more than three times what they charge younger consumers.
How it would change: The House GOP plan largely preserves the marketplaces and Obamacare’s requirements that health plans offer basic benefits.
And insurers would still be barred from imposing annual or lifetime limits.
But they would now be able to charge older consumers five times more than younger consumers.
How it works now: Among the most important features of the current law are insurance subsidies that are available to low- and moderate-income people who use the marketplaces to get coverage.
The current law offers these subsidies to people making less than about $48,000 a year.
There are several complicated, but very important, features of these subsidies.
First, they are linked to consumers’ incomes, so people who earn less get bigger subsidies.
Second, the size of the subsidies is also pegged to how much insurance plans cost. That means that if health plans are very expensive in one market — perhaps because hospitals there charge a lot for medical care — the subsidies in that market are larger.
This is a big deal because there are huge variations in how much health care costs around the country, with insurance premiums much higher in some places than in others. So people who live in higher-cost areas are protected.
It’s also important because health insurance premiums can change a lot from year to year. By pegging the size of the subsidy to the actual cost of health plans, the law protected consumers from big insurance increases.
The last important feature of the subsidies is that they are automatically applied to consumers’ monthly insurance bills. That means that low-income people don’t have to pay a large premium every month and then wait for a rebate, something that can be difficult for consumers who may be living paycheck to paycheck.
How it would change: The House plan completely scraps Obamacare’s subsidy system.
Subsidies would no longer be linked primarily to the price of health care plans and to consumers’ income.
Instead, Americans who don’t get coverage through an employer would qualify for a tax credit based on how old they are.
Older consumers would get larger credit, as much as $4,000 annually for people over 60. And younger consumers would get a smaller credit, as little as $2,000 for people younger than 30. This reflects the assumption that insurers charge younger people less as they are generally healthier.
The only income variation would happen for individuals making more than $75,000 a year and couples making more than $150,000. Subsidies would be phased out for these higher-income households.

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