In the Affordability Alphabet Soup of the ACA and EHBs, a Link to Higher Premiums Isn’t Clear-Cut

When President Donald Trump unveiled his one-page outline to address health care spending, dubbed “The Great Healthcare Plan,” he specifically mentioned the Affordable Care Act’s role in driving up costs. 

“I call it the unaffordable care act,” he said. He reprised the line in his 2026 State of the Union address, blaming “the crushing cost of health care” on Obamacare. 

Trump’s words play off an ongoing congressional debate that began late last year, ahead of the expiration of the enhanced tax subsidies that had lowered the cost of ACA insurance for millions of Americans. 

Democrats, looking toward the November midterm elections, continue to use that lapse to focus public attention on affordability. 

Republicans take a different view, routinely pointing to specific provisions as culprits. Among them, the law’s essential health benefits mandate, which says Obamacare plans must cover certain basic services — including emergency care, hospitalization, maternity care, and prescription drugs — without annual or lifetime dollar limits while enrolled. 

But my colleague Sarah Boden and I found that connecting EHBs to the premium increases consumers are feeling is not a straight line. 

For starters, it’s clear that ACA premiums have increased. 

An analysis by the right-leaning Paragon Health Institute shows that the average Obamacare premium for a 50-year-old has grown by 129% since 2014. The average premium for employer-based plans grew 68% during the same period. 

Still, that’s not the whole picture.

Pre-ACA, coverage offered by employer plans was generally more generous and, therefore, costlier than coverage under individual market plans. Individual plans were cheaper also because they could bar applicants with health problems. Beginning in 2014, the ACA forced individual policies to look more like employer plans. As a result, premiums rose — sometimes faster than those of job-based plans. 

Individual market premiums, however, were on the rise before the ACA took effect. 

An analysis by Jonathan Gruber at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology found that premiums grew by at least 10% a year from 2008 to 2010. 

So do EHBs raise premiums? In some ways, yes, compared with pre-ACA plans that might not have covered now-required services like maternity care or prescription drugs. 

But in other ways, EHBs can save money because they’ve increased access to preventive care, said Gerard Anderson, a professor of health policy and management at Johns Hopkins University’s Bloomberg School of Public Health. 

Joseph Antos, a senior fellow emeritus at the conservative American Enterprise Institute, said other parts of the ACA — such as requiring insurers to accept anyone, regardless of health status, and limiting insurers’ ability to charge older people more — also played roles in boosting premiums. 

“It’s practically impossible to tease any one thing out,” Antos said.

Read More

Latest

Boards are sleepwalking into the AI era. KPMG’s global risk chief has a survival guide

You walk into any boardroom in corporate America today and you will see two kinds of execs.  The first is stood at the head of the table, loudly proclaiming everything they are doing to embrace AI and predicting that it will change the world and everything in it. The second is silent, perhaps buried in

How AT&T Is Using an ‘Office’ Cast Reunion to Help Small Business Owners

Please enable JS and disable any ad blocker

How 1 Founder Used AI and a Little-Known Loan Program to Buy a 7-Figure Company

Please enable JS and disable any ad blocker

How Anthropic’s AI Went From Golden Child to Problem Child Over a Weekend

Please enable JS and disable any ad blocker

Newsletter

Don't miss

Boards are sleepwalking into the AI era. KPMG’s global risk chief has a survival guide

You walk into any boardroom in corporate America today and you will see two kinds of execs.  The first is stood at the head of the table, loudly proclaiming everything they are doing to embrace AI and predicting that it will change the world and everything in it. The second is silent, perhaps buried in

How AT&T Is Using an ‘Office’ Cast Reunion to Help Small Business Owners

Please enable JS and disable any ad blocker

How 1 Founder Used AI and a Little-Known Loan Program to Buy a 7-Figure Company

Please enable JS and disable any ad blocker

How Anthropic’s AI Went From Golden Child to Problem Child Over a Weekend

Please enable JS and disable any ad blocker

Canada crushes Qatar 6-0 for first-ever World Cup win as crypto sponsors circle the tournament

Canada just did something it has never done in the entire history of the FIFA World Cup: win a match. And they didn’t just squeak by. They demolished Qatar 6-0 at BC Place in Vancouver on June 18, in a game so lopsided it barely qualifies as competitive. Jonathan David scored a hat-trick. Qatar finished

Business delegation visits Kazakhstan to strengthen economic and trade cooperation

Astana, Kazakhstan, Jun 2, 2026 - (ACN Newswire) - A business delegation led by the Chief Executive of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR), John Lee, and organised by the Hong Kong Trade Development Council (HKTDC), began its visit to Astana, the capital of Kazakhstan, on 1 June. During the visit, a total of 43

13 Real Business Trip Stories That Prove Work Travel Collects More Stories Than Miles

Real business trips almost never go the way the itinerary promised. They start with a confidently-packed suitcase and an eight-page agenda, and somewhere between the airport gate and the hotel breakfast they quietly turn into something nobody could have invented — equal parts comedy, chaos, and unscheduled adventure. These 13 real business trip moments are exactly that kind of work-trip plot

Your business texts could look like scam messages from July 1 if you don’t act now

From July 1, any branded SMS your business sends without a registered sender ID will be labelled “Unverified” and grouped with scam messages.  What’s happening: From 1 July 2026, any business or organisation that sends SMS using a branded name, such as “MyShop” or “AcmeServices”, instead of a phone number, must have that sender ID