Unabogie
Philosopher
I would like a source for that claim, Unabogie. 1% seems too low to me. Best estimates from Kaiser have about one-third of the population making over 400% FPL (so they don't qualify for subsidies). Internal data from my work indicates that between 40% and 43% of the people in the Individual Market in my three states have FPLs over 400%. The research done in 2 of my 3 states by Milliman and Wakely indicate between 25% and 35% of those people will have higher premiums. There is uncertainty, because it depends on what metallic level they choose, and whether some of those people buy down to a bronze plan from their prior coverage. So all told, in my markets, that's 10% to 15% whose premiums will increase due to ACA... which is an order of magnitude or more than the number you're tossing about.
I've posted this link many times.
http://www.motherjones.com/kevin-dr...hock-probably-affects-about-1-percent-country
So that means about 1.3 million people had their policies canceled and had to pay full freight for a new policy. Since the error bars on this estimate are fairly large, that comes out to somewhere in the neighborhood of 1-2 million people. In other words, less than 1 percent of the country, mostly made up of people with incomes that are higher than average.
You can decide for yourself if this is a lot or a little. My own take is that it's pretty modest given that Obamacare probably benefits about 20-30 million people. Any big new piece of policy is going to have winners and losers, and a ratio of 20:1 or so is about as good as it gets in the real world.