The federal government on Friday approved a state program to drive down health insurance premiums next year for people who buy coverage in the state's troubled market for individuals.
Gov. Mark Dayton called the approval "very good news" on Friday, although it wasn't clear what impact the ruling might have on funding for the state's MinnesotaCare health insurance program.
Called "reinsurance," the state program would reduce individual market premiums by an average 20 percent or more compared with what consumers might otherwise pay. Dayton blasted federal officials earlier this week for suggesting that as part of the reinsurance approval, the state would see a much larger hit in funding for MinnesotaCare.
"That's a debate, discussion for a future week," Dayton said during the news conference when asked about the final approval's impact on MinnesotaCare. "I've told the Department of Commerce and MNsure to go ahead and load into MNsure's system the lower rates from the insurance companies."
Reinsurance provides a financial cushion to insurers that happen to attract subscribers with expensive medical conditions. Whereas proposed average premiums statewide would increase anywhere from 3 percent to 32 percent without the program, the range shifts downward significantly with reinsurance and includes double-digit premium reductions in some cases.
The premium reductions come in the state's individual market, where about 5 percent of Minnesotans purchase health insurance either through the state's MNsure health insurance exchange or directly from carriers. The market primarily serves people under age 65 who are self-employed or work for a company that doesn't provide health insurance.
MinnesotaCare serves a group of lower-income Minnesotans sometimes described as the "working poor."
Earlier this year, Minnesota lawmakers called for spending $542 million on reinsurance over two years to stabilize the individual market, which has seen premium spikes and pullbacks by private health insurers. The program is contingent on federal approval, however, of a waiver to certain federal rules.