matttyl
Footballguy
The 28% number is off because it's totally meaningless. Yes, 55% of those in this very small group apparently already had coverage in the individual market - that's all you know. You don't know that they were all canceled or not. You don't know which were grandfathered and which weren't.I said I was doing a "mattyl".You can't be this stupid.15 percent previously had individually-purchased coverage, but their old plans had been rendered illegal by Obamacare and were canceled. The remaining 40 percent were people previously covered under the old individual market, a market that was substantially less expensive than the Obamacare exchangesThat's not true at all, and for someone that posts as much as you do about the subject, you know know that.According to the statistics used to trivialize the 10 million ACA number only 28% of the cancelled plans were because they were not ACA compliant and not grandfathered. Yes, in the BS case the ACA stopped BS from confusing customers that its junk plan was insurance, but those with this "health plan" never had insurance to begin with. So in the vast majority of cases of those buying insurance one the exchange the insurance company decided to terminate the plan not because they had to, but because they wanted to. And in every single one of the other cases the "grandfathered status" should had been disclosed all along.(Yes I realize I'm doing a "mattyl" with this post, but I'll leave the challenge to figuring out how and what this means to what I wrote to the experts.)
You also don't know that in the "BS case" she didn't know that she really only had a discount card.
15/(15+40) = ???
Was the lady on CBS the only person with such a plan?
You're linking a "study" of only ~7,500 people for starters. Anyway, they are saying that of the 7,500 people, 15% of them had plans that were canceled, and another 40% apparently previously had individual coverage - though it doesn't say if they have been canceled, will be canceled, or were grandfathered. So then you take that to mean that only 28% of all the individual plans canceled were canceled because they were not ACA compliant and grandfathered?! That makes zero sense at all. I thought you were educated on the subject by all of the posts you make.
And the 28% number is probably off (but the survey size is the least of the reasons), but there has been no evidence to date to suggest that business decisions is a tiny minority of the plans that were cancelled. You know such as existing "guarantee issue" plans that can't compete with deals on the exchange (or even a company's new product line) or can't sell dirt cheap plans with annual and lifetime limits as well as recission policies being more heavily regulated - you know two of the three stated reasons from the carriers. So as of right now 28% is the best number we have. You're more than welcome to post better, more up to date, less extrapolated stats but whatever that number might be a good percentage of canceled plans were not cancelled because the ACA made them illegal.
Sorry that you want to claim that Obama was misleading with "if you like your plan you can keep it" while at the same time saying "the ACA cancelled all of these plans". It is not others with double standards.
Obamacare made it illegal for a carrier to renew any individual plan (initially sold after March of 2010) after January 1st, 2014 that wasn't "compliant". That's the very reason why the letters were sent out by Humana - allowing those plans to be renewed in December of 2013, the absolute last possible time they could be - allowing them to keep it for 12 months from that date. I myself have an individual plan that I bought before March of 2010 (so it's grandfathered), but had I purchased it in April of 2010 it would be deemed "not worthy" because it didn't include maternity. Yes, my policy that covers only me (a 33 year old male) would have been canceled because it wouldn't cover me if I ever got pregnant.
So, 100% of the individual plans that were canceled were done so because the ACA mandated that the carriers not renew them, as they weren't compliant. The carriers had no choice. Do you really honestly think the carriers would just drop all of their customers (and their premiums) if they didn't have to?!

up as you go along now. Just because carriers were allowed to continue coverage that would otherwise be cancelled doesn't mean that all continued coverage had to be cancelled. So once again you pull out
to fib.