Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

RiseInTheFuture.comRiseInTheFuture.com

Editor's Pick

Under Trump’s 2018 Health Insurance Relief, Obamacare Premiums Stabilized and Enrollments Doubled

Michael F. Cannon

Health care assistants

This post offers data to support a claim I make in today’s Wall Street Journal that codifying the health insurance relief that President Trump issued in 2018 would make health insurance affordable for millions without increasing federal spending or disrupting Obamacare.

Like the relief President Obama granted US territories in 2014 (which continues to this day), Trump’s 2018 final rule freed consumers from Obamacare’s costliest health insurance regulations. The Trump rule thus made comprehensive coverage available to consumers at premiums 60 percent below the lowest-price Obamacare plans. Federal courts upheld the Trump rule as a valid interpretation of current law. The Biden administration nevertheless revoked it, cutting millions off from affordable coverage. 

Congress can make health insurance affordable for millions, without spending a dime, by codifying the Trump rule.

Critics claim that codifying the Trump rule would destabilize Obamacare through adverse selection: healthy Obamacare enrollees would choose more affordable coverage; Obamacare pools would get sicker; Obamacare premiums would rise; Obamacare enrollments would fall as more healthy people dropped out; and the cycle would repeat itself. 

If the Trump rule would have had those effects, it would have produced those effects during the six years it was in place. Spoiler alert: it didn’t.

The first graph shows that while the Trump rule was in effect from 2018 to 2024, Obamacare premiums remained flat or even fell. Obamacare’s largest premium spikes occurred before the Trump rule took effect (average annual increase before 2018: 20 percent) and after Biden revoked it (cumulative increase since 2024: 31 percent).

Obamacare premiums fell during Trump health insurance relief, increased after Biden rescinded

The second graph shows that while the Trump rule was in effect, Obamacare enrollment doubled.

Trump health insurance relief coincided with rising Obamacare enrollment

We have already conducted a real-world test of the effect that freeing consumers to choose their own health plans would have on Obamacare. Contrary to the critics’ fears, Obamacare did just fine. The only evidence of an adverse-selection death spiral occurred while the Trump rule was not in effect. 

Congress should codify the Trump rule.

You May Also Like

Editor's Pick

Trump’s latest Hollywood “hit” isn’t the kind you stream. Threatening to slap a 100% tariff on films produced in foreign countries, the president’s announcement...

Editor's Pick

We’ve been cautious about the uptrend phase off the April low for a number of reasons, including the lack of breadth support.  While short-term...

Editor's Pick

Jeremy Horpedahl The Census Bureau recently released a massive amount of new data on Americans and the US economy, as they do each year...

Editor's Pick

Tad DeHaven and Nathan Miller Over the weekend, President Donald Trump’s eulogy at conservative activist Charlie Kirk’s memorial service unfortunately spun off into a...