California Previews NAIC’s End Game for Self-Insurance
In case you had any doubt
about the end game the National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC)
has in mind for self-insurance nationally, you simply need to look at what is
happening on the left coast.
Legislation is now moving
through the California State Legislature that would impose new regulations on
stop-loss insurance in such a way that would effectively eliminate the ability
of companies in that state with 50 or fewer employees from self-insuring their
group health plans. It does this by
prohibiting stop-loss carriers from providing coverage with specific attachment
points below $95,000 and inserting other regulatory hurdles, including a
provision stating that stop-loss insurance cannot discriminate in providing “coverage”
to plan participants.
We had heard rumors that
Insurance Commissioner Dave Jones was developing proposed legislation with a
$40,000 minimum specific attachment point requirement. That would have been bad enough, but a highly
charitable interpretation of such development could conclude that Commissioner
Jones’ motive was simply to support common sense health care marketplace
regulation.
Such a motive is highly
suspect of course, but the fact that he chose to push an attachment point requirement
that is more than three times higher than that of any other state is clearly a
brush back pitch to the self-insurance industry, to use a baseball analogy.
And Commissioner Jones did not
throw this pitch without direction from the dugout. The NAIC coaching staff likely sent him the
signal to bring the heat in order to set the stage for other states to do
likewise. California makes for the
perfect stalking horse due to its size and political composition of the
Legislature which is generally hostile to the interests of the state’s business
community.
We should also note that the
word on the street is that Commissioner Jones is using his position as a stepping
stone for higher public office and is looking for political fights to burnish
his image as a serious player.
While the weather is generally
nice in California, a perfect storm of legislative and regulatory mischief is
indeed brewing. And such a storm could
be coming to your state next.
So what’s behind all this
focus on self-insurance? There are two
primary influences at play.
First, it cannot be overstated
how much is riding politically for the Obama Administration and many others
within Democratic Party establishment at both the federal and state level regarding
the successful implementation of state health insurance exchanges as mandated
by the Affordable Care Act.
As part of this obsession they
are trying to stamp out any possible complication and have now latched on to
the theory that the growth in the number of smaller self-insured group health
plans will create adverse selection in the health care marketplace and therefor
will threaten the viability of the exchanges when they come online in 2014,
absent the law being overturned by the Supreme Court.
(This blog and other
publications have previously addressed why this conclusion is a canard, so we
won’t revisit the rebuttal analysis now.)
Armed with this concern,
proponents of the ACA have positioned the NAIC to ramp up its efforts to clamp
down on the ability of employers to self-insure.
While industry observers have
been fixated on the NAIC ERISA & ACA Work Group over the past year as it
has been looking at updating its stop-loss model act - which presumably would
bump up attachment point requirements - this blog is starting to think a little
misdirection is at work here.
Sure, the NAIC could at some
point come out with an updated model act that would not be favorable to the
self-insurance industry but this is slow process. Moreover, keep in mind that these are just
suggested laws that each state would need to individually adopt.
It seems more clear that while
this model act development process slowly plays out and keeps everyone’s
attention, the NAIC, through individual insurance commissioner proxies, will
simply “bum rush” the self-insurance industry with legislation like what has
been introduced in California.
And just in case these
insurance commissioners do not feel sufficiently motivated by NAIC orthodoxy,
the health insurance industry is happy to provide the necessary nudge, which is
the second factor in play on why self-insurance (via stop-loss insurance) is in
the regulatory crosshairs. It’s no
secret that health insurers are concerned about losing market share in the
small group market and they are enthusiastically parroting the adverse
selection argument to justify new regulation.
The fact that many insurance
commissioners and/or the governors receive political support from the health
insurance industry should also not be overlooked when making the circumstantial
case that collusion is taking place among very powerful policy-makers and interest
groups to restrict the ability of employers to self-insure.
Granted, California’s
legislation is targeted at smaller employers, which a small segment of the
overall self-insurance /alternative transfer marketplace. But make no mistake, the end game of the NAIC
is too strangle this marketplace in every way it can and limited encroachments
left unchecked will likely lead to more existential threats. Those involved with risk retention groups
(RRGs) can certainly attest to this observation.
It’s important to understand
this as the industry determines how it intends to position itself so it is not
on the receiving end of any more brush-back pitches.