Insurance agents worry health-care overhaul may shrink
their profits
By Linda Shrieves, Orlando Sentinel
5:37 PM EDT, October 17, 2010
Doctors aren't the only ones concerned about health-care
overhaul. Across the country, insurance agents are worried
that the new federal mandates may shut them out of the
health-care market.
While large insurance companies debated health-care
changes, small independent agents were relegated to the
sidelines. And they are watching the health-care overhaul
unfurl in Washington with trepidation.
Two changes could dramatically alter the landscape for
insurance agents selling health-care policies. First,
starting in January 2011, insurers must spend at least 80
percent of the premium on actual health-care costs, not
administrative costs — and that could dramatically reduce
the commissions given to insurance agents.
Looming on the horizon is another issue. In 2014, when
health-care exchanges are supposed to be up and running,
consumers will be able to look at Websites and figure out
the best plan for themselves — possibly with no help from
insurance agents.
"There are two main issues here for insurance agents. One
is: How are we going to make out in health-care reform?"
said Timothy Jost, a law professor at Washington & Lee
University in Virginia and author of Health Care at
Risk: A Critique of the Consumer-Driven Movement. "And
an even bigger issue is: Where do we fit in the future of
the health-care system?"
At LRA Insurance, James Lumbra Jr., the company's vice
president, is taking a wait-and-see attitude – waiting to
see if Republican gains in the November elections could
spell changes in how health-care overhaul is
implemented.
Although only 10 percent of his company's revenues come
from health-insurance policies, his agency — with offices
in Orlando, Melbourne and Tallahassee — has been hesitant
to devote more resources or staffers to selling health
insurance.
"Health-care reform still poses a dilemma for us," said
Lumbra. "Are we going to invest money, time and resources
in order to grow that side of the business — just for it to
be taken away?"
Lumbra's agency mirrors many across the nation. According
to a survey taken in March 2009 by the Independent
Insurance Agents & Brokers of America, sales of health
insurance comprise about 15 percent of the revenues for
independent insurance agencies across the country,
"It's not the bread and butter of our membership, but it is
an important stream of revenue," said John Prible, the
organization's vice president of federal government
affairs. And since Congress began discussing health-care
overhaul, "we've devoted a lot of resources with one goal
in mind: to make sure that agents still have a role in the
sale of the product."
In August, agents and brokers successfully lobbied state
insurance commissioners to acknowledge the role they play
in the insurance marketplace even after health-care
exchanges begin in 2014. And the organization has created a
task force to study how to guarantee that insurance agents
continue to be a key player.
At a meeting of the National Association of Insurance
Commissioners held last month, 25 commissioners sponsored a
resolution stating that implementation of health-care
overhaul should "recognize and protect the indispensable
role that licensed insurance professionals play in serving
consumers."
"A number of us feel very strongly about the important role
agents play in providing advice and counsel to thousands of
Floridians and Americans across the country in making
critical health-care decisions," said Florida Insurance
Commissioner Kevin McCarty.
For Central Florida insurance agents, the future of
health-care policies seems murky. But they feel strongly
that many consumers — especially small business owners —
will still need their help.
"At the end of the day, the American consumer has to have
someone knowledgeable to help them through the process —
and heaven help them if they have a claim," said Tom
Cotton, who owns Hugh Cotton Insurance Agency in Orlando
and serves as the national liaison for the Florida
Association of Insurance Agents.
New ratios
Beginning in January, federally mandated medical loss
ratios will go into effect that require insurance companies
to spend 80 percent of a policy's premiums on providing
health insurance — not paying administrative costs.
"Agents' commissions can amount to 15 percent or more of
the premium," Jost said, "so obviously, if the insurer has
to spend 80 percent on care — and the agent gets 15 percent
— that doesn't leave much for the insurance company. So
what the agents are afraid of, and it's a legitimate
concern, is that the insurers will try to reduce their
cut."
More than likely, Jost said, agents in the future will
receive a monthly payment or a flat fee, rather than a
commission. "But they're probably not going to make as much
as some of them have been making,"he said.
What insurance agents would like to see, says Prible, is
for the government to gradually phase in the MLR
requirements — starting with 75 percent of the premium
devoted to health care in 2011 and moving up one or two
percentage points each year.
The law allows the federal government the flexibility to
phase in the changes, Prible said, "to avoid severe market
disruption." And he is betting that the higher MLRs will
result in some insurers dropping individual and some small
business coverage altogether.
"The administrative cost of administering to individuals is
so much greater than large groups, that for a lot of these
companies, it's just not realistic to meet the 80 percent
threshold," Prible said. "What we're afraid of is the
unintended consequence of making a not-so-competitive
marketplace even less competitive, with fewer and fewer
companies offering coverage."
Enter the exchanges
If you've ever navigated a travel website — and tried to
book a flight — you've probably gotten a glimpse of what
the future of health insurance may look like.Starting in
2014, consumers — particularly those who are not covered by
health-insurance plans at work — will be able to buy
insurance through a state health-care exchange, an online
marketplace where they will be able to compare policies and
plans.
And, just as in the travel business, many insurance agents
may make less money — or completely change the way they do
business.
But the federal law also creates a new role — that of a
"navigator," someone who will help consumers navigate the
process of choosing insurance.
For agents, the question is who will become "navigators"?
Will navigators be part of a help desk — just answering
general questions from consumers? Or will they be licensed,
knowledgeable agents who actually help consumers choose
insurance? Each state is responsible for setting up its own
health-care exchange. the deadline for submitting a plan to
the federal government is January 2013. And while some
states have begun the process of creating their own
exchanges, states such as Florida have opted to let the
federal goernment run their health-care exchanges. That may
be a mistake = at least for insurance agents working in
Florida, say insurance industry lobbyists. "One of the
primary messages we're trying to convey to them is this:
Wehter you like it or not, whether your state likes it or
not, the health-care exchanges are going to be set up,"
Prible said. And if Florida's politicians don't want to set
up an exchange, then Florida insurers and insurance agents
won't have any say in how the exhange will operate -- and
what role insurance agents will play.
Still, there may be some opportunity for agents, especially
in 2014, when all Americans are required to carry health
insurance. What they lose in commissions, they could make
up in volume, said Prible. "Your insurance office could be
a full-service stop," Prible said. "Somebody could come in,
get their auto policy, update their homeowners, take a look
at the exchange and then the agent could ask, 'Do you need
any help enrolling in your health insurance?' "
Linda Shrieves can be reached at
lshrieves@orlandosentinel.com or 407-420-5433.