(Bloomberg) — Prices for individual major medical plans are stabilizing in Pennsylvania and will continue to unless the Trump administration and Republicans in Congress take action that would hurt the program, the state's insurance regulator said.
After a jump of more than 30% this year, insurers are raising their rates 8.8% on average in the Affordable Care Act's individual public exchange market for 2018, the Pennsylvania Insurance Department said. All five insurers that sold plans this year will again offer health insurance next year in the market, which covers about 500,000 people in the state, according a department statement.
"These low percentages show that Pennsylvania's market is stabilizing and insurers are better understanding the markets and the population they serve," Insurance Commissioner Teresa Miller, a former federal health official in the Obama administration, said in the statement.