Internal cost estimates from 17 of the nation's largest insurance companies
indicate that health insurance premiums will grow an average of 100
percent under Obamacare, and that some will soar more than 400 percent,
crushing the administration's goal of affordability.
New regulations, policies, taxes, fees and
mandates are the reason for the unexpected "rate shock," according to
the House Energy and Commerce Committee, which released a report Monday
based on internal documents provided by the insurance companies. The 17
companies include Aetna, Blue Cross Blue Shield and Kaiser Foundation.
The report found that individuals will
face "premium increases of nearly 100 percent on average, with potential
highs eclipsing 400 percent. Meanwhile, small businesses can expect
average premium increases in the small group market of up to 50 percent,
with potential highs over 100 percent."
One company said that new participants in the
individual market could see a premium increase of 413 percent when new
requirements on age rating and required benefits are taken into account,
said the report. "The average yearly cost for a new customer in the
individual market grows from $1,896 to $3,708 -- a $1,812 cost
increase," it added.
The key reasons for the surge in premiums
include providing wider services than people are now paying for and
adding less healthy people to the rolls of insured, said the report.
It concluded: "Despite promises that the law
will lower costs, [Obamacare] will in fact cause the premiums of many
Americans to spike substantially. The broken promises are numerous, and
the empirical data reveal that many Americans, from recent college
graduates to older adults, will not be able to afford the law's higher
costs."
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