(Bloomberg) — No. Take more. Really.
While most states have been pushing health insurers to curb proposed price increases, Florida is telling some of them they can charge more.
The state on Wednesday approved an average premium increase of 9.5 percent for Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) plans sold to individuals for next year. Insurers had asked to boost rates 8.6 percent on average.
Humana Inc. (NYSE:HUM) and Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Florida (Florida Blue) were among those whose final rates were higher than they'd first sought. Alex Kepnes, a Humana spokesman, said the approved increase incorporated updated information from the U.S. government on PPACA programs designed to spread cost, known as reinsurance and risk adjustments.
Kepnes said it's routine for rates to be adjusted between initial submission and final approval. Calls to a BCBS media line weren't answered.
Florida Blue doubled
Regulators can push insurers to raise rates if they think companies aren't charging enough to cover costs, which could raise the prospect of a company failing. They also have the power in some states to force insurers to lower rates.
"In most cases, when a state changes a rate in the rate review process, it's to lower it, not to increase it," said Cynthia Cox, who studies private health plans at the Kaiser Family Foundation.
Humana had asked to raise rates 7.4 percent in one set of plans it's selling in Florida. Instead, the Florida Office of Insurance Regulation told it to boost rates 16.3 percent. For the Florida Blue plan, the final rate increase was 8.9 percent, more than double the 4.3 percent request.