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How Does Health Insurance Concentration Affect Prices?

cogdogblog
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Flickr

  

Credit cogdogblog / Flickr
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Flickr

The Affordable Care Act marketplaces have led to a bunch of new research. One study out this monthlooked at concentration of hospitals and insurance plansin New York and California.

The research on hospitals is pretty clear: fewer hospitals in a region means higher premiums.

But on a different metric, results varied state to state: the concentration of insurance plans available in a region didn’t have the same impact on insurance prices.

Researchers found that when New Yorkers had fewer options for plans, they paid more for health insurance. But for Californians, it was the opposite. Fewer options there led to lower insurance rates.

Why? Well, in both states, insurance companies have to get their rates approved. But California goes a step further.

“What California did in addition to what New York does is that it said, not everybody gets to play in the marketplaces,” said SherryGlied.Gliedis a health economist at NYU and co-wrote the study in Health Affairs that looked at each state’sObamacaremarketplace.

California limits the number of plans that can sell on its exchange. So insurance companies have to compete for those spots. This built-in competition, the researchers think, kept prices lower there.

ButGliedsaid that these are conclusions are based on one year of data and two states. It doesn’t mean New York State should change its regulatory system in order to get lower premiums.

 “There are also a number of people who believe it’s important to just let anybody [play] who wants to. And that would be a fairer and perhaps more innovative insurance market,” Glied said.

Copyright 2016 WSKG News

Bret Jaspers
Bret Jaspers is a reporter for KERA. His stories have aired nationally on the BBC, NPR’s newsmagazines, and APM’s Marketplace. He collaborated on the series Cash Flows, which won a 2020 Sigma Delta Chi award for Radio Investigative Reporting. He's a member of Actors' Equity, the professional stage actors union.