hobbsyoyo
Deity
- Joined
- Jul 13, 2012
- Messages
- 26,575
Yeah, the anticipated cost was really bugging me. It wound up being a bit less than I feared, with a bit better coverage than I feared, so it worked out.Hobbs - Awesome. Glad to hear it. I know you'd been concerned about the issue for months. With that said, I'll comment on a few of your experiences.![]()
Actually, they give you the option to either receive the subsidy monthly or get it as a tax credit. I chose to take the subsidy monthly because my wife has a contract that won't change and as a student, I'm not making any income, so our income should remain relatively stable. As I'm writing this though, I forgot to factor in her yearly raise.I believe my way back first impression that you would receive subsidies in the form of a tax credit turned out to be incorrect. People will get subsidized in their actual bill.

They do ask you to take your whole year into account if you opt for the subsidy up-front and they also warn you that if your income changes, you may have to pay back some of the subsidy. I'm guessing if your income went down, they'd give you a bigger tax refund as well. But I can imagine a lot of people will under/over estimate their income and have to make some sort of adjustment, which may be unpleasant. However, by that point, you're doing your taxes and should be prepared for a potential bill, so the pain of having to pay back some subsidy at tax time may be less stressful than the prospect of paying higher upfront monthly premiums to most people. That's just a guess based on how stupid I estimate most people to be.With that said, let me tell you why, IMO, that was a political ploy but not a good one. It was a political ploy because everyone's happier that way!Everyone would prefer a smaller upfront bill rather than a tax credit, right? But, but... how do we know what your income is going to be for the rest of the year?
If you wind up with a much higher paying job for the last 6 months of the year, you should probably get a lower subsidy, right? If someone with a high paying job right now gets laid off, they should get a bigger subsidy than what the website would calculate right now, yes?
So, the easiest (not saying better, just easiest) way is to true it up when you pay your taxes. Take your whole year into account. Not your fluctuating income. Then determine your subsidy. I'm actually glad it worked it out this way. It's just not the best way to calculate the subsidy, mathematically speaking. And us mathematicians are hard-assed by-the-numbers peoples. Not known for our empathy, us mathbots. But I'm glad that empathy won out in this case.

Well, I didn't have any coverage before and I didn't have a doctor either, so I had no idea which plans that are offered allow you to see which doctors. So I checked each plan I looked at just to be sure because I didn't want to be buy a plan that I can only ever use if I drove 2 hours or something to see the one doctor near me in their network. Just trying to be a good consumer and all that.That's good to hear, but honestly, I hate that you were surprised by this. Everyone's doctor is still in network from the plans they were shopping before all this. The same drugs are covered.
What are we, stupid?Of course we (the insurance companies) designed the plans that we chose to offer on The Exchange to reflect the same plans we are currently offering pre-Exchange. Same doctors as our current plans. Same drugs. We're businesses. Our competitors are also on The Exchange! What kind of idiots would we be to design an Exchange Plan that didn't have the same doctors as the plans you could sign up for right now, off The Exchange? This is a big artificial issue with a giant DUH sign on it.
Here's the thing though - having a single exchange and all of that information at your fingertips is such an amazing powerful tool for consumers. Regardless of what people thing the government's role in healthcare should be, I would hope even diehard libertards can see the enormous benefit that this level of transparency brings to individuals. You say that's it's a no-brainer to offer the same doctors/plans on the exchange as off the exchange, but without the exchange, consumers have no real easy way to check that. It's daunting (to say the least, and as a practical reality all but impossible) to go out and check every single plan offered by every single provider for things like coverage/doctor networks/RX benefits and so on. It just can't be done easily with all the options and confusing individual company websites out there. But with the exchange, *bam* it's right there in your face and you can select multiple plans can compare them against one another on the same page. Then you can dig deeper if you want and get all the nitty-gritty details from links on that page that take you to the info on the providers page. But it's not even necessary to do that, I just wanted to cover all my bases. Just about everything you really need is right there on the exchange.
It's freaking amazing. I know it's weird to be this hyped up about health insurance but it's a BIG DEAL.
What is an HSA plan?Outside of HSA plans (which 1] I can go explain if anyone wants & 2] is what I have), most plans above Copper should have visits to your doctor & most prescriptions as a copay. The level varies, of course, but what you found *should* be the norm.
Also, at least in my area, about half of the Bronze plans (the lowest cost ones) had no copays for anything - you pay 100% out of pocket until you hit the deductible limit. The other half did have copays, but they were absurdly high IIRC. The plan I found was the only Bronze level plan I found with anything reasonable. It costs as much as low-cost Silver plans, but had much better benefits as far as copays for doctor visits and RX's go. In fact, it wasn't until you go to the mid-level Silver plans ($350/mo and up) that the benefits really started to equal the plan I found, so I got lucky.*
*having said that I realize that those other plans may have offered other benefits that my plan doesn't (I didn't even look at their details because I can't afford them) but for the things I care about (doctor visits and RX's), my plan was at least as good as those other Silver plans
Speaking of which - are employer plans allowed to 'grandfather' their plans or anything? My wife's insurance at her old job gave her an RX that the ACA mandated be made free, but when she changed jobs, her new insurer started making her pay for it again. I don't know why because I know for a fact the law says it should be free.The rest of your post I'll let stand on its own. It's really a win-win*. Us insurance companies love it - more members! - but it's much better coverage for many people. Or even "good coverage for people who had none". And it doesn't affect the vast majority of people who already had coverage through their employer!

NO IT'S NOT WIN WIN IT'S MORE LIKE OBAMA DESTROYED AMERICASo, the uninsured get health insurance. People with health insurance get better, cheaper coverage. Also, we drink all your milkshakes! More like *win-win-win IMO.

One other question:
You said something like a total of 26 million people got insurance through Medicare expansions/Medicaid, the Exchange and so on. So are those 26 million who didn't have insurance at all before the law? Because I know the country had like 52 million without insurance, so if I'm reading you right, the law helped ~half of those people get insurance already?