Emily's Cat
Rarely prone to hissy-fits
I do find it fascinating and hard to explain why costs are going down so much in Oregon but increasing by so much elsewhere?
This isn't an easy question to answer, as there are a lot of moving parts. In Oregon, there's a fairly large individual market compared to other states. There are also a lot of carriers competing for business. The state has also been very cooperative in doing advance research on how many people are expected to enter the market, how healthy they are likely to be, and how healthy the current individual pool is.
The result of these things is that we have better information and less uncertainty in Oregon than may be the case in other states. And with so many carriers and new insurers in the marketplace, there's more of a competitive environment, and more carriers are willing to price low to try to buy market share in the first few years.
For carriers in states with less information and fewer competitors, there may not be as much pressure to take a loss, and they may be more inclined to take less risks on it.
ETA: It's also impacted by the fact that OR has had an adjusted community rate environment for many years - we haven't been able to risk-rate in OR in ages (I don't know how long, it predates my work in this field). States that previously had full risk-rating will be more likely to see larger overall increases.
There's also the overarching fact that the department of insurance in Oregon has rate approval authority. In very many cases, they dictated what costs the carriers could charge. For example, Family Care was approved with rates 35% lower than what they requested; they decided to not participate this year because of it.
If you're interested in that level of detail, the rate decisions in OR are a matter of public record:
http://www.oregonhealthrates.org/
Select "I want to see all companies",
Then select "2014 Individual (Major Medical),
Then select "I want to see all requests".
After that, you can browse through the "Our decision" links under each carrier, or you can hit the "More Info" button and wade through tons of rate filing information until your eyes bleed
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