Nonprofit health plans that control a large chunk of Minnesota's insurance market are ready to offer better deals to hang onto their customers, consultants say, now that they have new competition from for-profit carriers.
Minnetonka-based UnitedHealthcare and Connecticut-based Aetna are making a push for more health insurance business in the state following a 2017 law that opened the market to more competition from investor-owned insurance companies.
However, while employers say they are happy for more options, the changes are not swift and they remain frustrated by the broader trend of escalating health care costs without obvious signs that waste is being wrung out of the system.
"We still have this huge affordability issue," said Deb Krause of the Minnesota Health Action Group, a Bloomington-based coalition of large employers that offer health plans. "We need the new competitive landscape to focus on health care innovation in terms of more efficient resource use and getting the best health outcomes for the limited dollars that we spend."
The health of these large organizations is important because they make up a large chunk of Minnesota's nonprofit business community. On the Star Tribune's annual Nonprofit 100, health care organizations took 14 of the top 15 spots and nearly one-quarter overall.
Six of the 10 largest nonprofit groups in the state primarily run hospitals and clinics, with collective revenue of about $26 billion, based on 2017 numbers, the most recent available. Three of the 10 largest nonprofits primarily sell health insurance, with collective revenue of about $13.2 billion.
Rounding out the top 10 is a nonprofit with revenue of about $6.6 billion that's roughly split between health insurance and health care providers.
The expansion of insurance competition in the Twin Cities has been obvious to consumers this fall due to a flurry of print, broadcast and online advertising from insurers, plus marketing messages that have been splattered across billboards, buses and light-rail trains.