83_FR_63655 83 FR 63419 - Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act; Adoption of the Methodology for the HHS-Operated Permanent Risk Adjustment Program for the 2018 Benefit Year Final Rule

83 FR 63419 - Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act; Adoption of the Methodology for the HHS-Operated Permanent Risk Adjustment Program for the 2018 Benefit Year Final Rule

DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES

Federal Register Volume 83, Issue 236 (December 10, 2018)

Page Range63419-63428
FR Document2018-26591

This final rule adopts the HHS-operated risk adjustment methodology for the 2018 benefit year. In February 2018, a district court vacated the use of statewide average premium in the HHS-operated risk adjustment methodology for the 2014 through 2018 benefit years. Following review of all submitted comments to the proposed rule, HHS is adopting for the 2018 benefit year an HHS-operated risk adjustment methodology that utilizes the statewide average premium and is operated in a budget-neutral manner, as established in the final rules published in the March 23, 2012 and the December 22, 2016 editions of the Federal Register.

Federal Register, Volume 83 Issue 236 (Monday, December 10, 2018)
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 236 (Monday, December 10, 2018)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 63419-63428]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2018-26591]


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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES

45 CFR Part 153

[CMS-9919-F]
RIN 0938-AT66


Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act; Adoption of the 
Methodology for the HHS-Operated Permanent Risk Adjustment Program for 
the 2018 Benefit Year Final Rule

AGENCY: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), Department of 
Health and Human Services (HHS).

ACTION: Final rule.

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SUMMARY: This final rule adopts the HHS-operated risk adjustment 
methodology for the 2018 benefit year. In February 2018, a district 
court vacated the use of statewide average premium in the HHS-operated 
risk adjustment methodology for the 2014 through 2018 benefit years. 
Following review of all submitted comments to the proposed rule, HHS is 
adopting for the 2018 benefit year an HHS-operated risk adjustment 
methodology that utilizes the statewide average premium and is operated 
in a budget-neutral manner, as established in the final rules published 
in the March 23, 2012 and the December 22, 2016 editions of the Federal 
Register.

DATES: The provisions of this final rule are effective on February 8, 
2019.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Abigail Walker, (410) 786-1725; Adam 
Shaw, (410) 786-1091; Jaya Ghildiyal, (301) 492-5149; or Adrianne 
Patterson, (410) 786-0686.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: 

I. Background

A. Legislative and Regulatory Overview

    The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (Pub. L. 111-148) 
was enacted on March 23, 2010; the Health Care and Education 
Reconciliation Act of 2010 (Pub. L. 111-152) was enacted on March 30, 
2010. These statutes are collectively referred to as ``PPACA'' in this 
final rule. Section 1343 of the PPACA established an annual permanent 
risk adjustment program under which payments are collected from health 
insurance issuers that enroll relatively low-risk populations, and 
payments are made to health insurance issuers that enroll relatively 
higher-risk populations. Consistent with section 1321(c)(1) of the 
PPACA, the Secretary is responsible for operating the risk adjustment 
program on behalf of any state that elects not to do so. For the 2018 
benefit year, HHS is responsible for operation of the risk adjustment 
program in all 50 states and the District of Columbia.
    HHS sets the risk adjustment methodology that it uses in states 
that elect not to operate risk adjustment in advance of each benefit 
year through a notice-and-comment rulemaking process with the intention 
that issuers will be able to rely on the methodology to price their 
plans appropriately (see 45 CFR 153.320; 76 FR 41930, 41932 through 
41933; 81 FR 94058, 94702 (explaining the importance of setting rules 
ahead of time and describing comments supporting that practice)).
    In the July 15, 2011 Federal Register (76 FR 41929), we published a 
proposed rule outlining the framework for the risk adjustment program. 
We implemented the risk adjustment program in a final rule, published 
in the March 23, 2012 Federal Register (77 FR 17219) (Premium 
Stabilization Rule). In the December 7, 2012 Federal Register (77 FR 
73117), we published a proposed rule outlining the proposed Federally 
certified risk adjustment methodologies for the 2014 benefit year and 
other parameters related to the risk adjustment program (proposed 2014 
Payment Notice). We published the 2014 Payment Notice final rule in the 
March 11, 2013 Federal Register (78 FR 15409). In the June 19, 2013 
Federal Register (78 FR 37032), we proposed a modification to the HHS-
operated risk adjustment methodology related to community rating 
states. In the October 30, 2013 Federal Register (78 FR 65046), we 
finalized this proposed modification related to community rating 
states. We published a correcting amendment to the 2014 Payment Notice 
final rule in the November 6, 2013 Federal Register (78 FR 66653) to 
address how an enrollee's age for the risk score calculation would be 
determined under the HHS-operated risk adjustment methodology.
    In the December 2, 2013 Federal Register (78 FR 72321), we 
published a proposed rule outlining the Federally certified risk 
adjustment methodologies for the 2015 benefit year and other parameters 
related to the risk adjustment program (proposed 2015 Payment Notice). 
We published the 2015 Payment Notice final rule in the March 11, 2014 
Federal Register (79 FR 13743). In the May 27, 2014 Federal Register 
(79 FR 30240), the 2015 fiscal year sequestration rate for the risk 
adjustment program was announced.
    In the November 26, 2014 Federal Register (79 FR 70673), we 
published a proposed rule outlining the proposed Federally certified 
risk adjustment methodologies for the 2016 benefit year and other 
parameters related to the risk adjustment program (proposed 2016 
Payment Notice). We published the 2016 Payment Notice final rule in the 
February 27, 2015 Federal Register (80 FR 10749).
    In the December 2, 2015 Federal Register (80 FR 75487), we 
published a proposed rule outlining the Federally certified risk 
adjustment methodology for the 2017 benefit year and other parameters 
related to the risk adjustment program (proposed 2017 Payment Notice). 
We published the 2017 Payment Notice final rule in the March 8, 2016 
Federal Register (81 FR 12204).
    In the September 6, 2016 Federal Register (81 FR 61455), we 
published a proposed rule outlining the Federally certified risk 
adjustment methodology for the 2018 benefit year and other parameters 
related to the risk adjustment program (proposed 2018 Payment Notice). 
We published the 2018 Payment Notice final rule in the December 22, 
2016 Federal Register (81 FR 94058).
    In the November 2, 2017 Federal Register (82 FR 51042), we 
published a proposed rule outlining the federally certified risk 
adjustment methodology for the 2019 benefit year. In that proposed 
rule, we proposed updates to the risk adjustment methodology and 
amendments to the risk adjustment data validation process (proposed 
2019 Payment Notice). We published the 2019 Payment Notice final rule 
in the April 17, 2018 Federal Register (83 FR 16930). We published a 
correction to the 2019 risk adjustment coefficients in the 2019 Payment 
Notice final rule in the May 11, 2018 Federal Register (83 FR 21925). 
On July 27, 2018, consistent with Sec.  153.320(b)(1)(i), we updated 
the 2019 benefit year final risk adjustment model coefficients to 
reflect an additional recalibration related to an

[[Page 63420]]

update to the 2016 enrollee-level EDGE dataset.\1\
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    \1\ See Updated 2019 Benefit Year Final HHS Risk Adjustment 
Model Coefficients. July 27, 2018. Available at https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Regulations-and-Guidance/Downloads/2019-Updtd-Final-HHS-RA-Model-Coefficients.pdf.
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    In the July 30, 2018 Federal Register (83 FR 36456), we published a 
final rule that adopted the 2017 benefit year HHS-operated risk 
adjustment methodology set forth in the March 23, 2012 Federal Register 
(77 FR 17220 through 17252) and in the March 8, 2016 Federal Register 
(81 FR 12204 through 12352). The final rule provided an additional 
explanation of the rationale for use of statewide average premium in 
the HHS-operated risk adjustment state payment transfer formula for the 
2017 benefit year, including why the program is operated in a budget-
neutral manner. That final rule permitted HHS to resume 2017 benefit 
year program operations, including collection of risk adjustment 
charges and distribution of risk adjustment payments. HHS also provided 
guidance as to the operation of the HHS-operated risk adjustment 
program for the 2017 benefit year in light of publication of the final 
rule.\2\
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    \2\ See https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Regulations-and-Guidance/Downloads/2017-RA-Final-Rule-Resumption-RAOps.pdf.
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    In the August 10, 2018 Federal Register (83 FR 39644), we published 
the proposed rule concerning the adoption of the 2018 benefit year HHS-
operated risk adjustment methodology set forth in the March 23, 2012 
Federal Register (77 FR 17220 through 17252) and in the December 22, 
2016 Federal Register (81 FR 94058 through 94183).

B. The New Mexico Health Connections Court's Order

    On February 28, 2018, in a suit brought by the health insurance 
issuer New Mexico Health Connections, the United States District Court 
for the District of New Mexico (the district court) vacated the use of 
statewide average premium in the HHS-operated risk adjustment 
methodology for the 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, and 2018 benefit years. The 
district court reasoned that HHS had not adequately explained its 
decision to adopt a methodology that used statewide average premium as 
the cost-scaling factor to ensure that the amount collected from 
issuers equals the amount of payments made to issuers for the 
applicable benefit year, that is, a methodology that maintains the 
budget neutrality of the HHS-operated risk adjustment program for the 
applicable benefit year.\3\ The district court otherwise rejected New 
Mexico Health Connections' arguments.
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    \3\ New Mexico Health Connections v. United States Department of 
Health and Human Services et al., No. CIV 16-0878 JB/JHR (D.N.M. 
Feb. 28, 2018). On March 28, 2018, HHS filed a motion requesting 
that the district court reconsider its decision. A hearing on the 
motion for reconsideration was held on June 21, 2018. On October 19, 
2018, the court denied HHS's motion for reconsideration. See New 
Mexico Health Connections v. United States Department of Health and 
Human Services et al., No. CIV 16-0878 JB/JHR (D.N.M. Oct. 19, 
2018).
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C. The PPACA Risk Adjustment Program

    The risk adjustment program provides payments to health insurance 
plans that enroll populations with higher-than-average risk and 
collects charges from plans that enroll populations with lower-than-
average risk. The program is intended to reduce incentives for issuers 
to structure their plan benefit designs or marketing strategies to 
avoid higher-risk enrollees and lessen the potential influence of risk 
selection on the premiums that plans charge. Instead, issuers are 
expected to set rates based on average risk and compete based on plan 
features rather than selection of healthier enrollees. The program 
applies to any health insurance issuer offering plans in the 
individual, small group and merged markets, with the exception of 
grandfathered health plans, group health insurance coverage described 
in 45 CFR 146.145(c), individual health insurance coverage described in 
45 CFR 148.220, and any plan determined not to be a risk adjustment 
covered plan in the applicable Federally certified risk adjustment 
methodology.\4\ In 45 CFR part 153, subparts A, B, D, G, and H, HHS 
established standards for the administration of the permanent risk 
adjustment program. In accordance with Sec.  153.320, any risk 
adjustment methodology used by a state, or by HHS on behalf of the 
state, must be a federally certified risk adjustment methodology.
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    \4\ See the definition for ``risk adjustment covered plan'' at 
Sec.  153.20.
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    As stated in the 2014 Payment Notice final rule, the federally 
certified risk adjustment methodology developed and used by HHS in 
states that elect not to operate a risk adjustment program is based on 
the premise that premiums for that state market should reflect the 
differences in plan benefits and efficiency--not the health status of 
the enrolled population.\5\ HHS developed the risk adjustment state 
payment transfer formula that calculates the difference between the 
revenues required by a plan based on the projected health risk of the 
plan's enrollees and the revenues that the plan can generate for those 
enrollees. These differences are then compared across plans in the 
state market risk pool and converted to a dollar amount based on the 
statewide average premium. HHS chose to use statewide average premium 
and normalize the risk adjustment state payment transfer formula to 
reflect state average factors so that each plan's enrollment 
characteristics are compared to the state average and the total 
calculated payment amounts equal total calculated charges in each state 
market risk pool. Thus, each plan in the state market risk pool 
receives a risk adjustment payment or charge designed to compensate for 
risk for a plan with average risk in a budget-neutral manner. This 
approach supports the overall goal of the risk adjustment program to 
encourage issuers to rate for the average risk in the applicable state 
market risk pool, and mitigates incentives for issuers to operate less 
efficiently, set higher prices, or develop benefit designs or create 
marketing strategies to avoid high-risk enrollees. Such incentives 
could arise if HHS used each issuer's plan's own premium in the state 
payment transfer formula, instead of statewide average premium.
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    \5\ See 78 FR at 15417.
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II. Provisions of the Proposed Rule and Analysis of and Responses to 
Public Comments

    In the August 10, 2018 Federal Register (83 FR 39644), we published 
a proposed rule that proposed to adopt the HHS-operated risk adjustment 
methodology as previously established in the March 23, 2012 Federal 
Register (77 FR 17220 through 17252) and the December 22, 2016 Federal 
Register (81 FR 94058 through 94183) for the 2018 benefit year, with an 
additional explanation regarding the use of statewide average premium 
and the budget-neutral nature of the HHS-operated risk adjustment 
program. We did not propose to make any changes to the previously 
published HHS-operated risk adjustment methodology for the 2018 benefit 
year.
    As explained above, the district court vacated the use of statewide 
average premium in the HHS-operated risk adjustment methodology for the 
2014 through 2018 benefit years on the grounds that HHS did not 
adequately explain its decision to adopt that aspect of the risk 
adjustment methodology. The district court recognized that use of 
statewide average premium maintained the budget neutrality of the 
program, but concluded that HHS had not adequately explained the 
underlying decision to adopt a methodology that kept the program budget 
neutral, that is, a methodology that ensured that amounts

[[Page 63421]]

collected from issuers would equal payments made to issuers for the 
applicable benefit year. Accordingly, HHS provided the additional 
explanation in the proposed rule.
    As explained in the proposed rule, Congress designed the risk 
adjustment program to be implemented and operated by states if they 
chose to do so. Nothing in section 1343 of the PPACA requires a state 
to spend its own funds on risk adjustment payments, or allows HHS to 
impose such a requirement. Thus, while section 1343 may have provided 
leeway for states to spend additional funds on their programs if they 
voluntarily chose to do so, HHS could not have required such additional 
funding.
    We also explained that while the PPACA did not include an explicit 
requirement that the risk adjustment program be operated in a budget-
neutral manner, HHS was constrained by appropriations law to devise a 
risk adjustment methodology that could be implemented in a budget-
neutral fashion. In fact, although the statutory provisions for many 
other PPACA programs appropriated or authorized amounts to be 
appropriated from the U.S. Treasury, or provided budget authority in 
advance of appropriations,\6\ the PPACA neither authorized nor 
appropriated additional funding for risk adjustment payments beyond the 
amount of charges paid in, and did not authorize HHS to obligate itself 
for risk adjustment payments in excess of charges collected.\7\ Indeed, 
unlike the Medicare Part D statute, which expressly authorized the 
appropriation of funds and provided budget authority in advance of 
appropriations to make Part D risk-adjusted payments, the PPACA's risk 
adjustment statute made no reference to additional appropriations.\8\ 
Because Congress omitted from the PPACA any provision appropriating 
independent funding or creating budget authority in advance of an 
appropriation for the risk adjustment program, we explained that HHS 
could not--absent another source of appropriations--have designed the 
program in a way that required payments in excess of collections 
consistent with binding appropriations law. Thus, Congress did not give 
HHS discretion to implement a risk adjustment program that was not 
budget neutral.
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    \6\ For examples of PPACA provisions appropriating funds, see 
PPACA secs. 1101(g)(1), 1311(a)(1), 1322(g), and 1323(c). For 
examples of PPACA provisions authorizing the appropriation of funds, 
see PPACA secs. 1002, 2705(f), 2706(e), 3013(c), 3015, 3504(b), 
3505(a)(5), 3505(b), 3506, 3509(a)(1), 3509(b), 3509(e), 3509(f), 
3509(g), 3511, 4003(a), 4003(b), 4004(j), 4101(b), 4102(a), 4102(c), 
4102(d)(1)(C), 4102(d)(4), 4201(f), 4202(a)(5), 4204(b), 4206, 
4302(a), 4304, 4305(a), 4305(c), 5101(h), 5102(e), 5103(a)(3), 5203, 
5204, 5206(b), 5207, 5208(b), 5210, 5301, 5302, 5303, 5304, 5305(a), 
5306(a), 5307(a), and 5309(b).
    \7\ See 42 U.S.C. 18063.
    \8\ Compare 42 U.S.C. 18063 (failing to specify source of 
funding other than risk adjustment charges), with 42 U.S.C. 1395w-
116(c)(3) (authorizing appropriations for Medicare Part D risk 
adjusted payments); 42 U.S.C. 1395w-115(a) (establishing ``budget 
authority in advance of appropriations Acts'' for Medicare Part D 
risk adjusted payments).
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    Furthermore, the proposed rule explained that if HHS elected to 
adopt a risk adjustment methodology that was contingent on 
appropriations from Congress through the annual appropriations process, 
that would have created uncertainty for issuers regarding the amount of 
risk adjustment payments they could expect for a given benefit year. 
That uncertainty would have undermined one of the central objectives of 
the risk adjustment program, which is to stabilize premiums by assuring 
issuers in advance that they will receive risk adjustment payments if, 
for the applicable benefit year, they enroll a higher-risk population 
compared to other issuers in the state market risk pool. The budget-
neutral framework spreads the costs of covering higher-risk enrollees 
across issuers throughout a given state market risk pool, thereby 
reducing incentives for issuers to engage in risk-avoidance techniques 
such as designing or marketing their plans in ways that tend to attract 
healthier individuals, who cost less to insure.
    Moreover, the proposed rule noted that relying on each year's 
budget process for appropriation of additional funds to HHS that could 
be used to supplement risk adjustment transfers would have required HHS 
to delay setting the parameters for any risk adjustment payment 
proration rates until well after the plans were in effect for the 
applicable benefit year. The proposed rule also explained that any 
later-authorized program management appropriations made to CMS were not 
intended to be used for supplementing risk adjustment payments, and 
were allocated by the agency for other, primarily administrative, 
purposes. Specifically, it has been suggested that the annual lump sum 
appropriation to CMS for program management (CMS Program Management 
account) was potentially available for risk adjustment payments. The 
lump sum appropriation for each year was not enacted until after the 
applicable rule announcing the HHS-operated methodology for the 
applicable benefit year, and therefore could not have been relied upon 
in promulgating that rule. Additionally, as the underlying budget 
requests reflect, the CMS Program Management account was intended for 
program management expenses, such as administrative costs for various 
CMS programs such as Medicaid, Medicare, the Children's Health 
Insurance Program, and the PPACA's insurance market reforms--not for 
the program payments under those programs. CMS would have elected to 
use the CMS Program Management account for these important program 
management expenses, rather than program payments for risk adjustment, 
even if CMS had discretion to use all or part of the lump sum for such 
program payments. Without the adoption of a budget-neutral framework, 
we explained that HHS would have needed to assess a charge or otherwise 
collect additional funds, or prorate risk adjustment payments to 
balance the calculated risk adjustment transfer amounts. The resulting 
uncertainty would have conflicted with the overall goals of the risk 
adjustment program--to stabilize premiums and to reduce incentives for 
issuers to avoid enrolling individuals with higher-than-average 
actuarial risk.
    In light of the budget-neutral framework discussed above, the 
proposed rule explained that we also chose not to use a different 
parameter for the state payment transfer formula under the HHS-operated 
methodology, such as each plan's own premium, that would not have 
automatically achieved equality between risk adjustment payments and 
charges in each benefit year. As set forth in prior discussions,\9\ use 
of the plan's own premium or a similar parameter would have required 
the application of a balancing adjustment in light of the program's 
budget neutrality--either reducing payments to issuers owed a payment, 
increasing charges on issuers due a charge, or splitting the difference 
in some fashion between issuers owed payments and issuers assessed 
charges. Using a plan's own premium would have frustrated the risk 
adjustment program's goals, as discussed above, of encouraging issuers 
to rate for the average risk in the applicable state market risk pool, 
and avoiding the creation of incentives for issuers to operate less 
efficiently, set higher prices, or develop benefit designs or create 
marketing strategies to avoid high-risk enrollees. Use of an after-the-
fact balancing adjustment is also less predictable for issuers than a

[[Page 63422]]

methodology that is established before the benefit year. We explained 
that such predictability is important to serving the risk adjustment 
program's goals of premium stabilization and reducing issuer incentives 
to avoid enrolling higher-risk populations.
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    \9\ See for example, September 12, 2011, Risk Adjustment 
Implementation Issues White Paper, available at https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Files/Downloads/riskadjustment_whitepaper_web.pdf.
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    Additionally, the proposed rule noted that using a plan's own 
premium to scale transfers may provide additional incentives for plans 
with high-risk enrollees to increase premiums in order to receive 
higher risk adjustment payments. As noted by commenters to the 2014 
Payment Notice proposed rule, transfers also may be more volatile from 
year to year and sensitive to anomalous premiums if they were scaled to 
a plan's own premium instead of the statewide average premium. In the 
2014 Payment Notice final rule, we noted that we received a number of 
comments in support of our proposal to use statewide average premium as 
the basis for risk adjustment transfers, while some commenters 
expressed a desire for HHS to use a plan's own premium.\10\ HHS 
addressed those comments by reiterating that we had considered the use 
of a plan's own premium, but chose to use statewide average premium, as 
this approach supports the overall goals of the risk adjustment program 
to encourage issuers to rate for the average risk in the applicable 
state market risk pool, and avoids the creation of incentives for 
issuers to employ risk-avoidance techniques.\11\
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    \10\ 78 FR 15410, 15432.
    \11\ Id.
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    The proposed rule also explained that although HHS has not yet 
calculated risk adjustment payments and charges for the 2018 benefit 
year, immediate administrative action was imperative to maintain 
stability and predictability in the individual, small group and merged 
insurance markets. Without administrative action, the uncertainty 
related to the HHS-operated risk adjustment methodology for the 2018 
benefit year could add uncertainty to the individual, small group and 
merged markets, as issuers determine the extent of their market 
participation and the rates and benefit designs for plans they will 
offer in future benefit years. Without certainty regarding the 2018 
benefit year HHS-operated risk adjustment methodology, there was a 
serious risk that issuers would substantially increase future premiums 
to account for the potential of uncompensated risk associated with 
high-risk enrollees. Consumers enrolled in certain plans with benefit 
and network structures that appeal to higher risk enrollees could see a 
significant premium increase, which could make coverage in those plans 
particularly unaffordable for unsubsidized enrollees. In states with 
limited Exchange options, a qualified health plan issuer exit would 
restrict consumer choice, and could put additional upward pressure on 
premiums, thereby increasing the cost of coverage for unsubsidized 
individuals and federal spending for premium tax credits. The 
combination of these effects could lead to involuntary coverage losses 
in certain state market risk pools.
    Additionally, the proposed rule explained that HHS's failure to 
make timely risk adjustment payments could impact the solvency of 
issuers providing coverage to sicker (and costlier) than average 
enrollees that require the influx of risk adjustment payments to 
continue operations. When state regulators evaluate issuer solvency, 
any uncertainty surrounding risk adjustment transfers hampers their 
ability to make decisions that protect consumers and support the long-
term health of insurance markets.
    In response to the district court's February 2018 decision that 
vacated the use of statewide average premium in the risk adjustment 
methodology on the grounds that HHS did not adequately explain its 
decision to adopt that aspect of the methodology, we offered the 
additional explanation outlined above in the proposed rule, and 
proposed to maintain the use of statewide average premium in the 
applicable state market risk pool for the state payment transfer 
formula under the HHS-operated risk adjustment methodology for the 2018 
benefit year. HHS proposed to adopt the methodology previously 
established for the 2018 benefit year in the Federal Register 
publications cited above that apply to the calculation, collection, and 
payment of risk adjustment transfers under the HHS-operated methodology 
for the 2018 benefit year. This included the adjustment to the 
statewide average premium, reducing it by 14 percent, to account for an 
estimated proportion of administrative costs that do not vary with 
claims.\12\ We sought comment on the proposal to use statewide average 
premium. However, in order to protect the settled expectations of 
issuers that structured their pricing, offering, and market 
participation decisions in reliance on the previously issued 2018 
benefit year methodology, all other aspects of the risk adjustment 
methodology were outside of the scope of the proposed rule, and HHS did 
not seek comment on those finalized aspects.
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    \12\ See 81 FR 94058 at 94099.
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    We summarize and respond to the comments received to the proposed 
rule below. Given the volume of exhibits, court filings, white papers 
(including all corresponding exhibits), and comments on other 
rulemakings incorporated by reference in one commenter's letter, we are 
not able to separately address each of those documents. Instead, we 
summarize and respond to the significant comments and issues raised by 
the commenter that are within the scope of this rulemaking.
    Comment: One commenter expressed general concerns about 
policymaking and implementation of the PPACA related to enrollment 
activity changes, cost-sharing reductions, and short-term, limited-
duration plans.
    Response: The use of statewide average premium in the HHS-operated 
risk adjustment methodology, including the operation of the program in 
a budget-neutral manner, which was the limited subject of the proposed 
rulemaking, was not addressed by this commenter. In fact, the commenter 
did not specifically address the risk adjustment program at all. 
Therefore, the concerns raised by this commenter are outside the scope 
of the proposed rule, and are not addressed in this final rule.
    Comment: Commenters were overwhelmingly in favor of HHS finalizing 
the rule as proposed, and many encouraged HHS to do so as soon as 
possible. Many commenters stated that by finalizing this rule as 
proposed, HHS is providing an additional explanation regarding the 
operation of the program in a budget-neutral manner and the use of 
statewide average premium for the 2018 benefit year consistent with the 
decision of the district court, and is reducing the risk of substantial 
instability to the Exchanges and individual and small group and merged 
market risk pools. Many commenters stated that no changes should be 
made to the risk adjustment methodology for the 2018 benefit year 
because issuers' rates for the 2018 benefit year were set based on the 
previously finalized methodology.
    Response: We agree that a prompt finalization of this rule is 
important to ensure the ongoing stability of the individual and small 
group and merged markets, and the ability of HHS to continue operations 
of the risk adjustment program normally for the 2018 benefit year. We 
also agree that finalizing the rule as proposed would maintain 
stability and ensure predictability of pricing in a budget-neutral 
framework because issuers relied on the 2018 HHS-operated risk 
adjustment methodology that used

[[Page 63423]]

statewide average premium during rate setting and when deciding in 
calendar year 2017 whether to participate in the market(s) during the 
2018 benefit year.
    Comment: Several commenters agreed with HHS's interpretation of the 
statute as requiring the operation of the risk adjustment program in a 
budget-neutral manner; several cited the absence of additional funding 
which would cover any possible shortfall between risk adjustment 
transfers as supporting the operation of the program in a budget-
neutral manner. One commenter highlighted that appropriations can vary 
from year to year, adding uncertainty and instability to the market(s) 
if the program relied on additional funding to cover potential 
shortfalls and was not operated in a budget-neutral manner, which in 
turn would affect issuer pricing decisions. These commenters noted that 
any uncertainty about whether Congress would fund risk adjustment 
payments would deprive issuers of the ability to make pricing and 
market participation decisions based on a legitimate expectation that 
risk adjustment transfers would occur as required in HHS regulations. 
Other commenters noted that without certainty of risk adjustment 
transfers, issuers would likely seek rate increases to account for this 
further uncertainty and the risk of enrolling a greater share of high-
cost individuals. Alternatively, issuers seeking to avoid significant 
premium increases would be compelled to develop alternative coverage 
arrangements that fail to provide adequate coverage to people with 
chronic conditions or high health care costs (for example, narrow 
networks or formulary design changes). Another commenter pointed to the 
fact that risk adjustment was envisioned by Congress as being run by 
the states, and that if HHS were to require those states that run their 
own program to cover any shortfall between what they collect and what 
they must pay out, HHS would effectively be imposing an unfunded 
mandate on states. The commenter noted there is no indication that 
Congress intended risk adjustment to impose such an unfunded mandate. 
Another commenter expressed that a budget-neutral framework was the 
most natural reading of the PPACA, with a different commenter stating 
this framework is implied in the statute.
    However, one commenter stated that risk adjustment does not need to 
operate as budget neutral, as section 1343 of the PPACA does not 
require that the program be budget neutral, and funds are available to 
HHS for the risk adjustment program from the CMS Program Management 
account to offset any potential shortfalls. The commenter also stated 
that the rationale for using statewide average premium to achieve 
budget neutrality is incorrect, and that even if budget neutrality is 
required, any risk adjustment payment shortfalls that may result from 
using a plan's own premium in the risk adjustment transfer formula 
could be addressed through pro rata adjustments to risk adjustment 
transfers. This commenter also stated that the use of statewide average 
premium is not predictable for issuers trying to set rates, especially 
for small issuers which do not have a large market share, as they do 
not have information about other issuers' rates at the time of rate 
setting. Conversely, many commenters noted that, absent an 
appropriation for risk adjustment payments, the prorated payments that 
would result from the use of a plan's own premium in the risk 
adjustment methodology would add an unnecessary layer of complexity for 
issuers when pricing and would reduce predictability, resulting in 
uncertainty and instability in the market(s).
    Response: We acknowledged in the proposed rule that the PPACA did 
not include a provision that explicitly required the risk adjustment 
program be operated in a budget-neutral manner; however, HHS was 
constrained by appropriations law to devise a risk adjustment 
methodology that could be implemented in a budget-neutral fashion. In 
fact, Congress did not authorize or appropriate additional funding for 
risk adjustment beyond the amount of charges paid in, and did not 
authorize HHS to obligate itself for risk adjustment payments in excess 
of charges collected. In the absence of additional, independent funding 
or the creation of budget authority in advance of an appropriation, HHS 
could not make payments in excess of charges collected consistent with 
binding appropriations law. Furthermore, we agree with commenters that 
the creation of a methodology that was contingent on Congress agreeing 
to appropriate supplemental funding of unknown amounts through the 
annual appropriations process would create uncertainty. It would also 
delay the process for setting the parameters for any potential risk 
adjustment proration until well after rates were set and the plans were 
in effect for the applicable benefit year. In addition to proration of 
risk adjustment payments to balance risk adjustment transfer amounts, 
we considered the impact of assessing additional charges or otherwise 
collecting additional funds from issuers of risk adjustment covered 
plans as alternatives to the establishment of a budget-neutral 
framework. All of these after-the-fact balancing adjustments were 
ultimately rejected because they are less predictable for issuers than 
a budget-neutral methodology which does not require after-the-fact 
balancing adjustments, a conclusion supported by the vast majority of 
comments received. As detailed in the proposed rule, HHS determined it 
would not be appropriate to rely on the CMS Program Management account 
because those amounts are designated for administration and operational 
expenses, not program payments, nor would the CMS Program Management 
account be sufficient to fund both the payments under the risk 
adjustment program and those administrative and operational expenses. 
Furthermore, use of such funds would create the same uncertainty and 
other challenges described above, as it would require reliance on the 
annual appropriations process and would require after-the-fact 
balancing adjustments to address shortfalls. After extensive analysis 
and evaluation of alternatives, we determined that the best method 
consistent with legal requirements is to operate the risk adjustment 
program in a budget-neutral manner, using statewide average premium as 
the cost scaling factor and normalizing the risk adjustment payment 
transfer formula to reflect state average factors.
    We agree with the commenters that calculating transfers based on a 
plan's own premium without an additional funding source to ensure full 
payment of risk adjustment payment amounts would create premium 
instability. If HHS implemented an approach based on a plan's own 
premium without an additional funding source, after-the-fact payment 
adjustments would be required. As explained above, the amount of these 
payment adjustments would vary from year to year, would delay the 
publication of final risk adjustment amounts, and would compel issuers 
with risk that is higher than the state average to speculate on the 
premium increase that would be necessary to cover an unknown risk 
adjustment payment shortfall amount. We considered and ultimately 
declined to adopt a methodology that required an after-the-fact 
balancing adjustment because such an approach is less predictable for 
issuers than a budget-neutral methodology that can be calculated in 
advance of a benefit year. This included consideration of a non-budget 
neutral HHS-operated risk adjustment methodology that used a plan's own 
premiums as the cost-scaling

[[Page 63424]]

factor, which we discuss in detail later in this preamble. Modifying 
the 2018 benefit year risk adjustment methodology to use a plan's own 
premium would reduce the predictability of risk adjustment payments and 
charges significantly. As commenters stated, the use of a plan's own 
premium would add an extra layer of complexity in estimating risk 
adjustment transfers because payments and charges would need to be 
prorated retrospectively based on the outcome of risk adjustment 
transfer calculations, but would need to be anticipated in advance of 
the applicable benefit year for use in issuers' pricing calculations. 
We do not agree with the commenter that statewide average premium is 
less predictable than a plan's own premium, as the use of statewide 
average premium under a budget-neutral framework makes risk adjustment 
transfers self-balancing, and provides payment certainty for issuers 
with higher-than-average risk.
    After considering the comments submitted, we are finalizing a 
methodology that operates risk adjustment in a budget-neutral manner 
using statewide average premium as the cost scaling factor and 
normalizing the risk adjustment payment transfer formula to reflect 
state average factors for the 2018 benefit year.
    Comment: The majority of the comments supported the use of 
statewide average premium in the HHS-operated risk adjustment 
methodology for the 2018 benefit year. Some commenters stated that the 
risk adjustment program is working as intended, by compensating issuers 
based on their enrollees' health status, that is, transferring funds 
from issuers with predominately low-risk enrollees to those with a 
higher-than-average share of high-risk enrollees. One commenter stated 
that the program has been highly effective at reducing loss-ratios and 
ensuring that issuers can operate efficiently, without concern for 
significant swings in risk from year to year. Although some commenters 
requested refinements to ensure that the methodology does not 
unintentionally harm smaller, newer, or innovative issuers, a different 
commenter noted that the results for all prior benefit years of the 
risk adjustment program do not support the assertion that the risk 
adjustment methodology undermines small health plans. This commenter 
noted that the July 9, 2018 ``Summary Report on Permanent Risk 
Adjustment Transfers for the 2017 Benefit Year'' found a very strong 
correlation between the amount of paid claims and the direction and 
scale of risk adjustment transfers.\13\ It also pointed to the American 
Academy of Actuaries' analysis of 2014 benefit year risk adjustment 
results, in which 103 of 163 small health plans (those with less than 
10 percent of market share) received risk adjustment payments and the 
average payment was 27 percent of premium.\14\ This commenter cited 
these points as evidence that risk adjustment is working as intended 
for small issuers. This commenter also cited an Oliver Wyman study that 
analyzed risk adjustment receipts by health plan member months (that 
is, issuer size) and found no systematic bias in the 2014 risk 
adjustment model.\15\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \13\ Available at https://downloads.cms.gov/cciio/Summary-Report-Risk-Adjustment-2017.pdf.
    \14\ American Academy of Actuaries, ``Insights on the ACA Risk 
Adjustment Program,'' April 2016. Available at http://actuary.org/files/imce/Insights_on_the_ACA_Risk_Adjustment_Program.pdf.
    \15\ Oliver Wyman, ``A Story in 4 Charts, Risk Adjustment in the 
Non-Group Market in 2014,'' February 24, 2016. Available at https://health.oliverwyman.com/2016/02/a_story_in_four_char.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    A few commenters stated that use of statewide average premium to 
scale risk adjustment transfers tends to penalize issuers with 
efficient care management and lower premiums and rewards issuers for 
raising rates. One of the commenters also stated that the HHS-operated 
risk adjustment methodology does not reflect relative actuarial risk, 
that statewide average premium harms issuers that price below the 
statewide average, and that the program does not differentiate between 
an issuer that has lower premiums because of medical cost savings from 
better care coordination and an issuer that has lower premiums because 
of healthier-than-average enrollees. The commenter suggested that HHS 
add a Care Management Effectiveness index into the risk adjustment 
formula. This commenter also stated that use of a plan's own premium 
rather than statewide average premium could improve the risk adjustment 
formula, stating that issuers would not be able to inflate their 
premiums to ``game'' the risk adjustment system due to other PPACA 
requirements such as medical loss ratio, rate review, and essential 
health benefits, as well as state insurance regulations, including 
oversight of marketing practices intended to avoid sicker enrollees.
    However, other commenters opposed the use of a plan's own premium 
in the risk adjustment formula based on a concern that it would 
undermine the risk adjustment program and create incentives for issuers 
to avoid enrolling high-cost individuals. Some commenters noted the 
difficulty of determining whether an issuer's low premium was the 
result of efficiency, mispricing, or a strategy to gain market share, 
and that the advantages of using statewide average premium outweigh the 
possibility that use of a plan's own premium could result in better 
reflection of cost management. One commenter noted that encouraging 
issuers to set premiums based on market averages in a state (that is, 
using statewide average premium) promotes market competition based on 
value, quality of care provided, and effective care management, not on 
the basis of risk selection. Other commenters strongly opposed the use 
of a plan's own premium, as doing so would introduce incentives for 
issuers to attract lower-risk enrollees because they would no longer 
have to pay their fair share, or because issuers that traditionally 
attract high-risk enrollees would be incentivized to increase premiums 
in order to receive larger risk adjustment payments. Others stated that 
the use of a plan's own premium would add an extra layer of complexity 
in estimating risk adjustment transfers, and therefore in premium rate 
setting, because payments and charges would need to be prorated 
retrospectively based on the outcome of risk adjustment transfer 
calculations, but would need to be anticipated prospectively as part of 
issuers' pricing calculations.
    One commenter expressed concern that the risk adjustment payment 
transfer formula exaggerates plan differences in risk because it does 
not address plan coding differences.
    Response: We agree with the majority of commenters that use of 
statewide average premium will maintain the integrity of the risk 
adjustment program by discouraging the creation of benefit designs and 
marketing strategies to avoid high-risk enrollees and promoting market 
stability and predictability. The benefits of using statewide average 
premium as the cost scaling factor in the risk adjustment state payment 
transfer formula extend beyond its role in maintaining the budget 
neutrality of the program. Consistent with the statute, under the HHS-
operated risk adjustment program, each plan in the risk pool receives a 
risk adjustment payment or charge designed to take into account the 
plan's risk compared to a plan with average risk. The statewide average 
premium reflects the statewide average cost and efficiency level and 
acts as the cost scaling factor in the state payment transfer formula 
under the HHS-operated risk adjustment methodology. HHS chose to use 
statewide average premium to encourage issuers to rate for the average 
risk, to automatically

[[Page 63425]]

achieve equality between risk adjustment payments and charges in each 
benefit year, and to avoid the creation of incentives for issuers to 
operate less efficiently, set higher prices, or develop benefits 
designs or create marketing strategies to avoid high-risk enrollees.
    HHS considered and again declined in the 2018 Payment Notice to 
adopt the use of each plan's own premium in the state payment transfer 
formula.\16\ As we noted in the 2018 Payment Notice, use of a plan's 
own premium would likely lead to substantial volatility in transfer 
results and could result in even higher transfer charges for low-risk, 
low-premium plans because of the program's budget neutrality. Under 
such an approach, high-risk, high-premium plans would require even 
greater transfer payments. If HHS applied a balancing adjustment in 
favor of these plans to maintain the budget-neutral nature of the 
program after transfers have been calculated using a plan's own 
premium, low-risk, low-premium plans would be required to pay in an 
even higher percentage of their plan-specific premiums in risk 
adjustment transfer charges due to the need to maintain budget 
neutrality. Furthermore, payments to high-risk, low-premium plans that 
are presumably more efficient than high-risk, high-premium plans would 
be reduced, incentivizing such plans to inflate premiums. In other 
words, the use of a plan's own premium in this scenario would neither 
reduce risk adjustment charges for low-cost and low-risk issuers, nor 
would it incentivize issuers to operate at the average efficiency. 
Alternatively, application of a balancing adjustment in favor of low-
risk, low-premium plans could have the effect of under-compensating 
high-risk plans, increasing the likelihood that such plans would raise 
premiums. In addition, if the application of a balancing adjustment was 
split equally between high-risk and low-risk plans, such an after-the-
fact adjustment, would create uncertainty and instability in the 
market(s), and would incentivize issuers to increase premiums to 
receive additional risk adjustment payments or to employ risk-avoidance 
techniques. As such, we agree with the commenters that challenges 
associated with pricing for transfers based on a plan's own premium 
would create pricing instability in the market, and introduce 
incentives for issuers to attract lower-risk enrollees to avoid paying 
their fair share. We also agree that it is very difficult to determine 
the reason an issuer has lower premiums than the average, since an 
issuer's low premium could be the result of efficiency, mispricing, or 
a strategy to gain market share. In all, the advantages of using 
statewide average premium outweigh the possibility that the use of a 
plan's own premium could result in better reflection of care or cost 
management, given the overall disadvantages, outlined above, of using a 
plan's own premium. HHS does not agree that use of statewide average 
premium penalizes efficient issuers or that it rewards issuers for 
raising rates.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \16\ 81 FR 94100.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Consistent with the 2018 Payment Notice,\17\ beginning with the 
2018 benefit year, this final rule adopts the 14 percent reduction to 
the statewide average premium to account for administrative costs that 
are unrelated to the claims risk of the enrollee population. While low 
cost plans are not necessarily efficient plans,\18\ we believe this 
adjustment differentiates between premiums that reflect savings 
resulting from administrative efficiency from premiums that reflect 
healthier-than-average enrollees. As detailed in the 2018 Payment 
Notice,\19\ to derive this parameter, we analyzed administrative and 
other non-claims expenses in the Medical Loss Ratio (MLR) Annual 
Reporting Form and estimated, by category, the extent to which the 
expenses varied with claims. We compared those expenses to the total 
costs that issuers finance through premiums, including claims, 
administrative expenses, and taxes, and determined that the mean 
administrative cost percentage in the individual, small group and 
merged markets is approximately 14 percent. We believe this amount 
represents a reasonable percentage of administrative costs on which 
risk adjustment should not be calculated.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \17\ 81 FR 94099.
    \18\ If a plan is a low-cost plan with low claims costs, it 
could be an indication of mispricing, as the issuer should be 
pricing for average risk.
    \19\ 81 FR 94100.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    We disagree that the HHS-operated risk adjustment methodology does 
not reflect relative actuarial risk or that the use of statewide 
average premium indicates otherwise. In fact, the risk adjustment 
models estimate a plan's relative actuarial risk across actuarial value 
metal levels, also referred to as ``simulated plan liability,'' by 
estimating the total costs a plan is expected to be liable for based on 
its enrollees' age, sex, hierarchical condition categories (HCCs), 
actuarial value, and cost-sharing structure. Therefore, this 
``simulated plan liability'' reflects the actuarial risk relative to 
the average that can be assigned to each enrollee. We then use an 
enrollee's plan selection and diagnoses during the benefit year to 
assign a risk score. Although the HHS risk adjustment models are 
calibrated on national data, and average costs can vary between 
geographic areas, relative actuarial risk differences are generally 
similar nationally. The solved coefficients from the risk adjustment 
models are then used to evaluate actuarial risk differences between 
plans. The risk adjustment state payment transfer formula then further 
evaluates the plan's actuarial risk based on enrollees' health risk, 
after accounting for factors a plan could have rated for, including 
metal level, the prevailing level of expenditures in the geographic 
areas in which the enrollees live, the effect of coverage on 
utilization (induced demand), and the age and family structure of the 
subscribers. This relative plan actuarial risk difference compared to 
the state market risk pool average is then scaled to the statewide 
average premium. The use of statewide average premium as a cost-scaling 
factor requires plans to assess actuarial risk, and therefore scales 
transfers to actuarial differences between plans in state market risk 
pool(s), rather than differences in premium.
    We have been continuously evaluating whether improvements are 
needed to the risk adjustment methodology, and will continue to do so 
as additional years' data become available. We decline to amend the 
risk adjustment methodology to include the Care Management 
Effectiveness index or a similar adjustment at this time. Doing so 
would be beyond the scope of this rulemaking, which addresses the use 
of statewide average premium and the operation of the risk adjustment 
program in a budget-neutral manner. A change of this magnitude would 
require significant study and evaluation. Although this type of change 
is not feasible at present, we will examine the feasibility, 
specificity, and sensitivity of measuring care management effectiveness 
through enrollee-level EDGE data for the individual, small group and 
merged markets, and the benefits of incorporating such measures in the 
risk adjustment methodology in future benefit years, either through 
rulemaking or other opportunities in which the public can submit 
comments. We believe that a robust risk adjustment program encourages 
issuers to adopt incentives to improve care management effectiveness, 
as doing so would reduce plans' medical costs. As we stated above, use 
of statewide average

[[Page 63426]]

premium in the risk adjustment state payment transfer formula 
incentivizes plans to apply effective care management techniques to 
reduce losses, whereas use of a plan's own premium could be 
inflationary as it benefits plans with higher-than-average costs and 
higher-than-average premiums.
    We are sympathetic to commenters' concerns about plan coding 
differences, and recognize that there is substantial variation in 
provider coding practices. We are continuing to strengthen the risk 
adjustment data validation program to ensure that conditions reported 
for risk adjustment are accurately coded and supported by medical 
records, and will adjust risk scores (and subsequently, risk adjustment 
transfers) beginning with 2017 benefit year data validation results to 
encourage issuers to continue to improve the accuracy of data used to 
compile risk scores and preserve confidence in the HHS-operated risk 
adjustment program.
    Comment: Some commenters provided suggestions to improve the risk 
adjustment methodology, such as different weights for metal tiers, 
multiple mandatory data submission deadlines, reducing the magnitude of 
risk scores across the board, and fully removing administrative 
expenses from the statewide average premium. One commenter stated that, 
while it did not conceptually take issue with the use of statewide 
average premium, the payment transfer formula under the HHS-operated 
risk adjustment methodology creates market distortions and causes 
overstatement of relative risk differences among issuers. This 
commenter cited concerns with the use of the Truven MarketScan[supreg] 
data to calculate plan risk scores under the HHS risk adjustment 
models, and suggested incorporating an adjustment to the calculation of 
plan risk scores until the MarketScan[supreg] data is no longer used.
    A few commenters stressed the importance of making changes 
thoughtfully and over time, and one encouraged HHS to actively seek 
improvements to avoid unnecessary litigation. Several commenters, while 
supportive of the proposed rule and its use for the 2018 benefit year, 
generally stated that the risk adjustment methodology should continue 
to be improved prospectively. Another commenter stated that the 
proposed rule did not do enough to improve the risk adjustment program, 
and encouraged HHS to review and consider suggestions to improve the 
risk adjustment methodology in order to promote stability and address 
the concerns raised in lawsuits other than the New Mexico case. One 
commenter further requested that HHS reopen rulemaking proceedings, 
reconsider, and revise the Payment Notices for the 2017 and 2019 
benefit years under section 553(e) of the Administrative Procedure Act.
    Response: We appreciate the feedback on potential improvements to 
the risk adjustment program, and will continue to consider the 
suggestions, analysis, and comments received from commenters for 
potential changes to future benefit years. This rulemaking is intended 
to provide additional explanation regarding the operation of the 
program in a budget-neutral manner and the use of statewide average 
premium for the 2018 benefit year, consistent with the February 2018 
decision of the district court. It also requires an expedited timeframe 
to maintain stability in the health insurance markets following the 
district court's vacatur of the use of statewide average premium in the 
HHS-operated risk adjustment methodology for the 2018 benefit year. We 
intend to continue to evaluate approaches to improve the risk 
adjustment models' calibration to reflect the individual, small group 
and merged markets actuarial risk and review additional years' data as 
they become available to evaluate all aspects of the HHS-operated risk 
adjustment methodology. We also continue to encourage issuers to submit 
EDGE server data earlier and more completely for future benefit years. 
However, the scope of the proposed rule was limited to the use of 
statewide average premium and the budget-neutral nature of the risk 
adjustment program for the 2018 benefit year, and consequently, we 
decline to adopt the various suggestions offered by commenters 
regarding potential improvements to the 2018 benefit year HHS-operated 
risk adjustment methodology as to other issues because they are outside 
the scope of this rule.
    We reiterate that HHS is always considering possible ways to 
improve the risk adjustment methodology for future benefit years. For 
example, in the 2018 Payment Notice, based on comments received for the 
2017 Payment Notice and the March 31, 2016, HHS-Operated Risk 
Adjustment Methodology Meeting Discussion Paper,\20\ HHS made multiple 
adjustments to the risk adjustment models and state payment transfer 
formula, including reducing the statewide average premium by 14 percent 
to account for the proportion of administrative costs that do not vary 
with claims, beginning with the 2018 benefit year.\21\ HHS also 
modified the risk adjustment methodology by incorporating a high-cost 
risk pool calculation to mitigate residual incentive for risk selection 
to avoid high-cost enrollees, to better account for the average risk 
associated with the factors used in the HHS risk adjustment models, and 
to ensure that the actuarial risk of a plan with high-cost enrollees is 
better reflected in risk adjustment transfers to issuers with high 
actuarial risk.\22\ Other recent changes made to the HHS-operated risk 
adjustment methodology include the incorporation of a partial year 
adjustment factor and prescription drug utilization factors.\23\ 
Furthermore, as outlined above, HHS stated in the 2019 Payment Notice 
that it would recalibrate the risk adjustment model using 2016 
enrollee-level EDGE data to better reflect individual, small group and 
merged market populations.\24\ We also consistently seek methods to 
support states' authority and provide states with flexible options, 
while ensuring the success of the risk adjustment program.\25\ We 
respond to comments regarding options available to states with respect 
to the risk adjustment program below. We appreciate the commenters' 
input and will continue to examine options for potential changes to the 
HHS-operated risk adjustment methodology in future notice with comment 
rulemaking.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \20\ https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Forms-Reports-and-Other-Resources/Downloads/RA-March-31-White-Paper-032416.pdf.
    \21\ See 81 FR 94100.
    \22\ See 81 FR 94080.
    \23\ See 81 FR at 94071 and 94074.
    \24\ See 83 FR 16940.
    \25\ Id. and 81 FR 29146.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The requests related to the 2017 and 2019 benefit year rulemakings 
are outside the scope of the proposed rule and this final rule, which 
is limited to the 2018 benefit year.
    Comment: One commenter suggested that states should have broad 
authority to cap and limit risk adjustment transfers and charges as 
necessary, stating that the requirements associated with the 
flexibility HHS granted to states to request a reduction to risk 
adjustment transfers beginning in 2020 are too onerous and unclear. The 
commenter noted that state regulators know their markets best and 
should have the discretion and authority to implement their own 
remedial measures without seeking HHS's permission. Conversely, one 
commenter specifically supported the state flexibility policy set forth 
in Sec.  153.320(d). A few commenters requested that states be allowed 
to establish alternatives to statewide

[[Page 63427]]

average premium, with one suggesting that this change begin with the 
2020 benefit year, and providing as an example the idea that HHS could 
permit states to aggregate the average premiums of two or more distinct 
geographic markets within a state.
    Response: HHS continually seeks to provide states with flexibility 
to determine what is best for their state markets. Section 1343 of the 
PPACA provides states authority to operate their own state risk 
adjustment programs. Under this authority, a state remains free to 
elect to operate the risk adjustment program and tailor it to its 
markets, which could include establishing alternatives to the statewide 
average premium methodology or aggregating the average premiums of two 
or more distinct geographic markets within a state. If a state does not 
elect to operate the risk adjustment program, HHS is required to do 
so.\26\ No state elected to operate the risk adjustment program for the 
2018 benefit year; therefore, HHS is responsible for operating the 
program in all 50 states and the District of Columbia.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \26\ See section 1321(c) of the PPACA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In the 2019 Payment Notice, HHS adopted Sec.  153.320(d) to provide 
states the flexibility, when HHS is operating the risk adjustment 
program, to request a reduction to the otherwise applicable risk 
adjustment transfers in the individual, small group, or merged markets 
by up to 50 percent.\27\ This flexibility was established to provide 
states the opportunity to seek state-specific adjustments to the HHS-
operated risk adjustment methodology without the necessity of operating 
their own risk adjustment programs. It is offered beginning with the 
2020 benefit year risk adjustment transfers and, since it involves an 
adjustment to the transfers calculated by HHS, it will require review 
and approval by HHS. States requesting such reductions must 
substantiate the transfer reduction requested and demonstrate that the 
actuarial risk differences in plans in the applicable state market risk 
pool are attributable to factors other than systematic risk 
selection.\28\ The process will give HHS the necessary information to 
evaluate the flexibility requests. We appreciate the comments offered 
on this flexibility, but note that they are outside the scope of the 
proposed rule, which was limited to the 2018 benefit year and did not 
propose any changes to the process established in Sec.  153.320(d). 
However, we will continue to consider commenter feedback on the 
process, along with any lessons learned from 2020 benefit year 
requests.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \27\ See 83 FR 16955.
    \28\ See Sec.  153.320(d) and 83 FR 16960.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    HHS has consistently acknowledged the role of states as primary 
regulators \29\ of their insurance markets, and we continue to 
encourage states to examine local approaches under state legal 
authority as they deem appropriate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \29\ See 83 FR 16955. Also see 81 FR 29146 at 29152 (May 11, 
2016), available at https://www.thefederalregister.org/fdsys/pkg/FR-2016-05-11/pdf/2016-11017.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Comment: One commenter detailed the impact of the HHS-operated risk 
adjustment methodology on the commenter, the CO-OP program's general 
struggles, and the challenges faced by some non-CO-OP issuers, stating 
that this is evidence that the HHS-operated risk adjustment methodology 
is flawed. The commenter urged HHS to make changes discussed above to 
the methodology to address what it maintains are unintended financial 
impacts on small issuers that are required to pay large risk adjustment 
charges, and also challenged the assertion that the current risk 
adjustment methodology is predictable.
    Response: HHS previously recognized and acknowledged that certain 
issuers, including a limited number of newer, rapidly growing, or 
smaller issuers, owed substantial risk adjustment charges that they did 
not anticipate in the initial years of the program. HHS has regularly 
discussed with issuers and state regulators ways to encourage new 
participation in the health insurance markets and to mitigate the 
effects of substantial risk adjustment charges. Program results 
discussed earlier have shown that the risk adjustment methodology has 
worked as intended, that risk adjustment transfers correlate with the 
amount of paid claims rather than issuer size, and that no systemic 
bias is found when risk adjustment receipts are analyzed by health plan 
member months. We created an interim risk adjustment reporting process, 
beginning with the 2015 benefit year, to provide issuers and states 
with preliminary information about the applicable benefit year's 
geographic cost factor, billable member months, and state averages such 
as monthly premiums, plan liability risk score, allowable rating 
factor, actuarial value, and induced demand factors by market. States 
may pursue local approaches under state legal authority to address 
concerns related to insolvencies and competition, including in 
instances where certain state laws or regulations differentially affect 
smaller or newer issuers. In addition, as detailed above, beginning 
with the 2020 benefit year, states may request a reduction in the 
transfer amounts calculated under the HHS-operated methodology to 
address state-specific rules or market dynamics to more precisely 
account for the expected cost of relative risk differences in the 
state's market risk pool(s).
    Finally, HHS has consistently sought to increase the predictability 
and certainty of transfer amounts in order to promote the premium 
stabilization goal of the risk adjustment program. Statewide average 
premium provides greater predictability of an issuer's final risk 
adjustment receivables than use of a plan's own premium, and we 
disagree with comments stating that the use of a plan's own premium in 
the risk adjustment transfer formula would result in greater 
predictability in pricing. As discussed previously, if a plan's own 
premium is used as a scaling factor, risk adjustment transfers would 
not be budget neutral. After-the-fact adjustments would be necessary in 
order for issuers to receive the full amount of calculated payments, 
creating uncertainty and lack of predictability.

III. Provisions of the Final Regulations

    After consideration of the comments received, this final rule 
adopts the HHS-operated risk adjustment methodology for the 2018 
benefit year which utilizes statewide average premium and operates the 
program in a budget-neutral manner, as established in the final rules 
published in the March 23, 2012 and the December 22, 2016 editions of 
the Federal Register.

IV. Collection of Information Requirements

    This document does not impose information collection requirements, 
that is, reporting, recordkeeping, or third-party disclosure 
requirements. Consequently, there is no need for review by the Office 
of Management and Budget under the authority of the Paperwork Reduction 
Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501, et seq.).

V. Regulatory Impact Analysis

A. Statement of Need

    The proposed rule and this final rule were published in light of 
the February 2018 district court decision described above that vacated 
the use of statewide average premium in the HHS-operated risk 
adjustment methodology for the 2014-2018 benefit years. This final rule 
adopts the HHS-operated risk adjustment methodology for the 2018 
benefit year, maintaining the use of statewide average premium as the 
cost-scaling factor in the HHS-operated risk adjustment methodology and 
the

[[Page 63428]]

continued operation of the program in a budget-neutral manner, to 
protect consumers from the effects of adverse selection and premium 
increases that would result from issuer uncertainty. The Premium 
Stabilization Rule, previous Payment Notices, and other rulemakings 
noted above provided detail on the implementation of the risk 
adjustment program, including the specific parameters applicable for 
the 2018 benefit year.

B. Overall Impact

    We have examined the impact of this rule as required by Executive 
Order 12866 on Regulatory Planning and Review (September 30, 1993), 
Executive Order 13563 on Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review 
(January 18, 2011), the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) (September 19, 
1980, Pub. L. 96-354), section 1102(b) of the Social Security Act, 
section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (March 22, 
1995; Pub. L. 104-4), Executive Order 13132 on Federalism (August 4, 
1999), the Congressional Review Act (5 U.S.C. 804(2)), and Executive 
Order 13771 on Reducing Regulation and Controlling Regulatory Costs. 
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563 direct agencies to assess all costs 
and benefits of available regulatory alternatives and, if regulation is 
necessary, to select regulatory approaches that maximize net benefits 
(including potential economic, environmental, public health and safety 
effects, distributive impacts, and equity). A regulatory impact 
analysis (RIA) must be prepared for major rules with economically 
significant effects ($100 million or more in any one year).
    OMB has determined that this final rule is ``economically 
significant'' within the meaning of section 3(f)(1) of Executive Order 
12866, because it is likely to have an annual effect of $100 million in 
any 1 year. In addition, for the reasons noted above, OMB has 
determined that this final rule is a major rule under the Congressional 
Review Act.
    This final rule offers further explanation of budget neutrality and 
the use of statewide average premium in the risk adjustment state 
payment transfer formula when HHS is operating the permanent risk 
adjustment program established by section 1343 of the PPACA on behalf 
of a state for the 2018 benefit year. We note that we previously 
estimated transfers associated with the risk adjustment program in the 
Premium Stabilization Rule and the 2018 Payment Notice, and that the 
provisions of this final rule do not change the risk adjustment 
transfers previously estimated under the HHS-operated risk adjustment 
methodology established in those final rules. The approximate estimated 
risk adjustment transfers for the 2018 benefit year are $4.8 billion. 
As such, we also incorporate into this final rule the RIA in the 2018 
Payment Notice proposed and final rules.\30\ This final rule is not 
subject to the requirements of Executive Order 13771 (82 FR 9339, 
February 3, 2017) because it is expected to result in no more than de 
minimis costs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \30\ 81 FR 61455 and 81 FR 94058.

    Dated: November 16, 2018.
Seema Verma,
Administrator, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.
    Dated: November 19, 2018.
Alex M. Azar II,
Secretary, Department of Health and Human Services.
[FR Doc. 2018-26591 Filed 12-7-18; 8:45 am]
 BILLING CODE 4120-01-P



                      Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 236 / Monday, December 10, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                      63419

     Final rule                                              30, 2010. These statutes are collectively             for the 2015 benefit year and other
                                                             referred to as ‘‘PPACA’’ in this final                parameters related to the risk
     § 380.10   [Corrected]                                  rule. Section 1343 of the PPACA                       adjustment program (proposed 2015
     ■  2. On page 61125, in the third column,               established an annual permanent risk                  Payment Notice). We published the
     in § 380.10, in paragraph (a)(2),                       adjustment program under which                        2015 Payment Notice final rule in the
     ‘‘$0.0019’’ is corrected to read                        payments are collected from health                    March 11, 2014 Federal Register (79 FR
     ‘‘$0.0018’’.                                            insurance issuers that enroll relatively              13743). In the May 27, 2014 Federal
       Dated: December 3, 2018.                              low-risk populations, and payments are                Register (79 FR 30240), the 2015 fiscal
     David R. Strickler,                                     made to health insurance issuers that                 year sequestration rate for the risk
                                                             enroll relatively higher-risk populations.
     Copyright Royalty Judge.                                                                                      adjustment program was announced.
                                                             Consistent with section 1321(c)(1) of the
     [FR Doc. 2018–26606 Filed 12–7–18; 8:45 am]                                                                     In the November 26, 2014 Federal
                                                             PPACA, the Secretary is responsible for
     BILLING CODE 1410–72–P
                                                             operating the risk adjustment program                 Register (79 FR 70673), we published a
                                                             on behalf of any state that elects not to             proposed rule outlining the proposed
                                                             do so. For the 2018 benefit year, HHS                 Federally certified risk adjustment
     DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND                                is responsible for operation of the risk              methodologies for the 2016 benefit year
     HUMAN SERVICES                                          adjustment program in all 50 states and               and other parameters related to the risk
                                                             the District of Columbia.                             adjustment program (proposed 2016
     45 CFR Part 153                                            HHS sets the risk adjustment                       Payment Notice). We published the
     [CMS–9919–F]                                            methodology that it uses in states that               2016 Payment Notice final rule in the
                                                             elect not to operate risk adjustment in               February 27, 2015 Federal Register (80
     RIN 0938–AT66                                           advance of each benefit year through a                FR 10749).
                                                             notice-and-comment rulemaking
     Patient Protection and Affordable Care                  process with the intention that issuers                 In the December 2, 2015 Federal
     Act; Adoption of the Methodology for                    will be able to rely on the methodology               Register (80 FR 75487), we published a
     the HHS-Operated Permanent Risk                         to price their plans appropriately (see 45            proposed rule outlining the Federally
     Adjustment Program for the 2018                         CFR 153.320; 76 FR 41930, 41932                       certified risk adjustment methodology
     Benefit Year Final Rule                                 through 41933; 81 FR 94058, 94702                     for the 2017 benefit year and other
                                                             (explaining the importance of setting                 parameters related to the risk
     AGENCY:  Centers for Medicare &
     Medicaid Services (CMS), Department                     rules ahead of time and describing                    adjustment program (proposed 2017
     of Health and Human Services (HHS).                     comments supporting that practice)).                  Payment Notice). We published the
                                                                In the July 15, 2011 Federal Register              2017 Payment Notice final rule in the
     ACTION: Final rule.                                     (76 FR 41929), we published a proposed                March 8, 2016 Federal Register (81 FR
                                                             rule outlining the framework for the risk             12204).
     SUMMARY:  This final rule adopts the
                                                             adjustment program. We implemented
     HHS-operated risk adjustment                                                                                    In the September 6, 2016 Federal
                                                             the risk adjustment program in a final
     methodology for the 2018 benefit year.                                                                        Register (81 FR 61455), we published a
                                                             rule, published in the March 23, 2012
     In February 2018, a district court                                                                            proposed rule outlining the Federally
                                                             Federal Register (77 FR 17219)
     vacated the use of statewide average                                                                          certified risk adjustment methodology
                                                             (Premium Stabilization Rule). In the
     premium in the HHS-operated risk                                                                              for the 2018 benefit year and other
                                                             December 7, 2012 Federal Register (77
     adjustment methodology for the 2014                                                                           parameters related to the risk
                                                             FR 73117), we published a proposed
     through 2018 benefit years. Following                                                                         adjustment program (proposed 2018
                                                             rule outlining the proposed Federally
     review of all submitted comments to the                 certified risk adjustment methodologies               Payment Notice). We published the
     proposed rule, HHS is adopting for the                  for the 2014 benefit year and other                   2018 Payment Notice final rule in the
     2018 benefit year an HHS-operated risk                  parameters related to the risk                        December 22, 2016 Federal Register (81
     adjustment methodology that utilizes                    adjustment program (proposed 2014                     FR 94058).
     the statewide average premium and is                    Payment Notice). We published the
     operated in a budget-neutral manner, as                                                                         In the November 2, 2017 Federal
                                                             2014 Payment Notice final rule in the
     established in the final rules published                                                                      Register (82 FR 51042), we published a
                                                             March 11, 2013 Federal Register (78 FR
     in the March 23, 2012 and the December                  15409). In the June 19, 2013 Federal                  proposed rule outlining the federally
     22, 2016 editions of the Federal                        Register (78 FR 37032), we proposed a                 certified risk adjustment methodology
     Register.                                               modification to the HHS-operated risk                 for the 2019 benefit year. In that
     DATES:  The provisions of this final rule               adjustment methodology related to                     proposed rule, we proposed updates to
     are effective on February 8, 2019.                      community rating states. In the October               the risk adjustment methodology and
                                                             30, 2013 Federal Register (78 FR                      amendments to the risk adjustment data
     FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
     Abigail Walker, (410) 786–1725; Adam                    65046), we finalized this proposed                    validation process (proposed 2019
     Shaw, (410) 786–1091; Jaya Ghildiyal,                   modification related to community                     Payment Notice). We published the
     (301) 492–5149; or Adrianne Patterson,                  rating states. We published a correcting              2019 Payment Notice final rule in the
     (410) 786–0686.                                         amendment to the 2014 Payment Notice                  April 17, 2018 Federal Register (83 FR
                                                             final rule in the November 6, 2013                    16930). We published a correction to the
     SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
                                                             Federal Register (78 FR 66653) to                     2019 risk adjustment coefficients in the
     I. Background                                           address how an enrollee’s age for the                 2019 Payment Notice final rule in the
                                                             risk score calculation would be                       May 11, 2018 Federal Register (83 FR
     A. Legislative and Regulatory Overview
                                                             determined under the HHS-operated                     21925). On July 27, 2018, consistent
       The Patient Protection and Affordable                 risk adjustment methodology.                          with § 153.320(b)(1)(i), we updated the
     Care Act (Pub. L. 111–148) was enacted                     In the December 2, 2013 Federal                    2019 benefit year final risk adjustment
     on March 23, 2010; the Health Care and                  Register (78 FR 72321), we published a                model coefficients to reflect an
     Education Reconciliation Act of 2010                    proposed rule outlining the Federally
                                                                                                                   additional recalibration related to an
     (Pub. L. 111–152) was enacted on March                  certified risk adjustment methodologies


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     63420            Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 236 / Monday, December 10, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

     update to the 2016 enrollee-level EDGE                  otherwise rejected New Mexico Health                    can generate for those enrollees. These
     dataset.1                                               Connections’ arguments.                                 differences are then compared across
        In the July 30, 2018 Federal Register                                                                        plans in the state market risk pool and
     (83 FR 36456), we published a final rule                C. The PPACA Risk Adjustment
                                                                                                                     converted to a dollar amount based on
     that adopted the 2017 benefit year HHS-                 Program
                                                                                                                     the statewide average premium. HHS
     operated risk adjustment methodology                       The risk adjustment program provides                 chose to use statewide average premium
     set forth in the March 23, 2012 Federal                 payments to health insurance plans that                 and normalize the risk adjustment state
     Register (77 FR 17220 through 17252)                    enroll populations with higher-than-                    payment transfer formula to reflect state
     and in the March 8, 2016 Federal                        average risk and collects charges from                  average factors so that each plan’s
     Register (81 FR 12204 through 12352).                   plans that enroll populations with                      enrollment characteristics are compared
     The final rule provided an additional                   lower-than-average risk. The program is                 to the state average and the total
     explanation of the rationale for use of                 intended to reduce incentives for issuers               calculated payment amounts equal total
     statewide average premium in the HHS-                   to structure their plan benefit designs or              calculated charges in each state market
     operated risk adjustment state payment                  marketing strategies to avoid higher-risk               risk pool. Thus, each plan in the state
     transfer formula for the 2017 benefit                   enrollees and lessen the potential                      market risk pool receives a risk
     year, including why the program is                      influence of risk selection on the                      adjustment payment or charge designed
     operated in a budget-neutral manner.                    premiums that plans charge. Instead,                    to compensate for risk for a plan with
     That final rule permitted HHS to resume                 issuers are expected to set rates based                 average risk in a budget-neutral manner.
     2017 benefit year program operations,                   on average risk and compete based on                    This approach supports the overall goal
     including collection of risk adjustment                 plan features rather than selection of                  of the risk adjustment program to
     charges and distribution of risk                        healthier enrollees. The program applies                encourage issuers to rate for the average
     adjustment payments. HHS also                           to any health insurance issuer offering                 risk in the applicable state market risk
     provided guidance as to the operation of                plans in the individual, small group and                pool, and mitigates incentives for
     the HHS-operated risk adjustment                        merged markets, with the exception of                   issuers to operate less efficiently, set
     program for the 2017 benefit year in                    grandfathered health plans, group                       higher prices, or develop benefit designs
     light of publication of the final rule.2                health insurance coverage described in                  or create marketing strategies to avoid
        In the August 10, 2018 Federal                       45 CFR 146.145(c), individual health                    high-risk enrollees. Such incentives
     Register (83 FR 39644), we published                    insurance coverage described in 45 CFR                  could arise if HHS used each issuer’s
     the proposed rule concerning the                        148.220, and any plan determined not to                 plan’s own premium in the state
     adoption of the 2018 benefit year HHS-                  be a risk adjustment covered plan in the                payment transfer formula, instead of
     operated risk adjustment methodology                    applicable Federally certified risk                     statewide average premium.
     set forth in the March 23, 2012 Federal                 adjustment methodology.4 In 45 CFR
     Register (77 FR 17220 through 17252)                    part 153, subparts A, B, D, G, and H,                   II. Provisions of the Proposed Rule and
     and in the December 22, 2016 Federal                    HHS established standards for the                       Analysis of and Responses to Public
     Register (81 FR 94058 through 94183).                   administration of the permanent risk                    Comments
                                                             adjustment program. In accordance with                     In the August 10, 2018 Federal
     B. The New Mexico Health Connections
                                                             § 153.320, any risk adjustment                          Register (83 FR 39644), we published a
     Court’s Order
                                                             methodology used by a state, or by HHS                  proposed rule that proposed to adopt
        On February 28, 2018, in a suit                      on behalf of the state, must be a                       the HHS-operated risk adjustment
     brought by the health insurance issuer                  federally certified risk adjustment                     methodology as previously established
     New Mexico Health Connections, the                      methodology.                                            in the March 23, 2012 Federal Register
     United States District Court for the                       As stated in the 2014 Payment Notice                 (77 FR 17220 through 17252) and the
     District of New Mexico (the district                    final rule, the federally certified risk                December 22, 2016 Federal Register (81
     court) vacated the use of statewide                     adjustment methodology developed and                    FR 94058 through 94183) for the 2018
     average premium in the HHS-operated                     used by HHS in states that elect not to                 benefit year, with an additional
     risk adjustment methodology for the                     operate a risk adjustment program is                    explanation regarding the use of
     2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, and 2018                        based on the premise that premiums for                  statewide average premium and the
     benefit years. The district court                       that state market should reflect the                    budget-neutral nature of the HHS-
     reasoned that HHS had not adequately                    differences in plan benefits and                        operated risk adjustment program. We
     explained its decision to adopt a                       efficiency—not the health status of the                 did not propose to make any changes to
     methodology that used statewide                         enrolled population.5 HHS developed                     the previously published HHS-operated
     average premium as the cost-scaling                     the risk adjustment state payment                       risk adjustment methodology for the
     factor to ensure that the amount                        transfer formula that calculates the                    2018 benefit year.
     collected from issuers equals the                       difference between the revenues                            As explained above, the district court
     amount of payments made to issuers for                  required by a plan based on the                         vacated the use of statewide average
     the applicable benefit year, that is, a                 projected health risk of the plan’s                     premium in the HHS-operated risk
     methodology that maintains the budget                   enrollees and the revenues that the plan                adjustment methodology for the 2014
     neutrality of the HHS-operated risk                                                                             through 2018 benefit years on the
     adjustment program for the applicable                   et al., No. CIV 16–0878 JB/JHR (D.N.M. Feb. 28,         grounds that HHS did not adequately
     benefit year.3 The district court                       2018). On March 28, 2018, HHS filed a motion            explain its decision to adopt that aspect
                                                             requesting that the district court reconsider its       of the risk adjustment methodology. The
       1 See Updated 2019 Benefit Year Final HHS Risk        decision. A hearing on the motion for
                                                             reconsideration was held on June 21, 2018. On
                                                                                                                     district court recognized that use of
     Adjustment Model Coefficients. July 27, 2018.
     Available at https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/       October 19, 2018, the court denied HHS’s motion         statewide average premium maintained
     Regulations-and-Guidance/Downloads/2019-                for reconsideration. See New Mexico Health              the budget neutrality of the program, but
     Updtd-Final-HHS-RA-Model-Coefficients.pdf.              Connections v. United States Department of Health       concluded that HHS had not adequately
       2 See https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/            and Human Services et al., No. CIV 16–0878 JB/JHR
                                                             (D.N.M. Oct. 19, 2018).
                                                                                                                     explained the underlying decision to
     Regulations-and-Guidance/Downloads/2017-RA-
     Final-Rule-Resumption-RAOps.pdf.                           4 See the definition for ‘‘risk adjustment covered   adopt a methodology that kept the
       3 New Mexico Health Connections v. United             plan’’ at § 153.20.                                     program budget neutral, that is, a
     States Department of Health and Human Services             5 See 78 FR at 15417.                                methodology that ensured that amounts


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                      Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 236 / Monday, December 10, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                              63421

     collected from issuers would equal                      creating budget authority in advance of               the underlying budget requests reflect,
     payments made to issuers for the                        an appropriation for the risk adjustment              the CMS Program Management account
     applicable benefit year. Accordingly,                   program, we explained that HHS could                  was intended for program management
     HHS provided the additional                             not—absent another source of                          expenses, such as administrative costs
     explanation in the proposed rule.                       appropriations—have designed the                      for various CMS programs such as
       As explained in the proposed rule,                    program in a way that required                        Medicaid, Medicare, the Children’s
     Congress designed the risk adjustment                   payments in excess of collections                     Health Insurance Program, and the
     program to be implemented and                           consistent with binding appropriations                PPACA’s insurance market reforms—not
     operated by states if they chose to do so.              law. Thus, Congress did not give HHS                  for the program payments under those
     Nothing in section 1343 of the PPACA                    discretion to implement a risk                        programs. CMS would have elected to
     requires a state to spend its own funds                 adjustment program that was not budget                use the CMS Program Management
     on risk adjustment payments, or allows                  neutral.                                              account for these important program
     HHS to impose such a requirement.                          Furthermore, the proposed rule                     management expenses, rather than
     Thus, while section 1343 may have                       explained that if HHS elected to adopt                program payments for risk adjustment,
     provided leeway for states to spend                     a risk adjustment methodology that was                even if CMS had discretion to use all or
     additional funds on their programs if                   contingent on appropriations from                     part of the lump sum for such program
     they voluntarily chose to do so, HHS                    Congress through the annual                           payments. Without the adoption of a
     could not have required such additional                 appropriations process, that would have               budget-neutral framework, we explained
     funding.                                                created uncertainty for issuers regarding             that HHS would have needed to assess
       We also explained that while the                      the amount of risk adjustment payments                a charge or otherwise collect additional
     PPACA did not include an explicit                       they could expect for a given benefit                 funds, or prorate risk adjustment
     requirement that the risk adjustment                    year. That uncertainty would have                     payments to balance the calculated risk
     program be operated in a budget-neutral                 undermined one of the central                         adjustment transfer amounts. The
     manner, HHS was constrained by                          objectives of the risk adjustment                     resulting uncertainty would have
     appropriations law to devise a risk                     program, which is to stabilize premiums               conflicted with the overall goals of the
     adjustment methodology that could be                    by assuring issuers in advance that they              risk adjustment program—to stabilize
     implemented in a budget-neutral                         will receive risk adjustment payments                 premiums and to reduce incentives for
     fashion. In fact, although the statutory                if, for the applicable benefit year, they             issuers to avoid enrolling individuals
     provisions for many other PPACA                         enroll a higher-risk population                       with higher-than-average actuarial risk.
     programs appropriated or authorized                     compared to other issuers in the state                   In light of the budget-neutral
     amounts to be appropriated from the                     market risk pool. The budget-neutral                  framework discussed above, the
     U.S. Treasury, or provided budget                       framework spreads the costs of covering               proposed rule explained that we also
     authority in advance of appropriations,6                higher-risk enrollees across issuers                  chose not to use a different parameter
     the PPACA neither authorized nor                        throughout a given state market risk                  for the state payment transfer formula
     appropriated additional funding for risk                pool, thereby reducing incentives for                 under the HHS-operated methodology,
     adjustment payments beyond the                          issuers to engage in risk-avoidance                   such as each plan’s own premium, that
     amount of charges paid in, and did not                  techniques such as designing or                       would not have automatically achieved
     authorize HHS to obligate itself for risk               marketing their plans in ways that tend               equality between risk adjustment
     adjustment payments in excess of                        to attract healthier individuals, who cost            payments and charges in each benefit
     charges collected.7 Indeed, unlike the                  less to insure.
                                                                                                                   year. As set forth in prior discussions,9
     Medicare Part D statute, which                             Moreover, the proposed rule noted
                                                                                                                   use of the plan’s own premium or a
     expressly authorized the appropriation                  that relying on each year’s budget
     of funds and provided budget authority                  process for appropriation of additional               similar parameter would have required
     in advance of appropriations to make                    funds to HHS that could be used to                    the application of a balancing
     Part D risk-adjusted payments, the                      supplement risk adjustment transfers                  adjustment in light of the program’s
     PPACA’s risk adjustment statute made                    would have required HHS to delay                      budget neutrality—either reducing
     no reference to additional                              setting the parameters for any risk                   payments to issuers owed a payment,
     appropriations.8 Because Congress                       adjustment payment proration rates                    increasing charges on issuers due a
     omitted from the PPACA any provision                    until well after the plans were in effect             charge, or splitting the difference in
     appropriating independent funding or                    for the applicable benefit year. The                  some fashion between issuers owed
                                                             proposed rule also explained that any                 payments and issuers assessed charges.
       6 For examples of PPACA provisions                    later-authorized program management                   Using a plan’s own premium would
     appropriating funds, see PPACA secs. 1101(g)(1),        appropriations made to CMS were not                   have frustrated the risk adjustment
     1311(a)(1), 1322(g), and 1323(c). For examples of
                                                             intended to be used for supplementing                 program’s goals, as discussed above, of
     PPACA provisions authorizing the appropriation of                                                             encouraging issuers to rate for the
     funds, see PPACA secs. 1002, 2705(f), 2706(e),          risk adjustment payments, and were
     3013(c), 3015, 3504(b), 3505(a)(5), 3505(b), 3506,      allocated by the agency for other,                    average risk in the applicable state
     3509(a)(1), 3509(b), 3509(e), 3509(f), 3509(g), 3511,   primarily administrative, purposes.                   market risk pool, and avoiding the
     4003(a), 4003(b), 4004(j), 4101(b), 4102(a), 4102(c),                                                         creation of incentives for issuers to
     4102(d)(1)(C), 4102(d)(4), 4201(f), 4202(a)(5),         Specifically, it has been suggested that
     4204(b), 4206, 4302(a), 4304, 4305(a), 4305(c),         the annual lump sum appropriation to                  operate less efficiently, set higher
     5101(h), 5102(e), 5103(a)(3), 5203, 5204, 5206(b),      CMS for program management (CMS                       prices, or develop benefit designs or
     5207, 5208(b), 5210, 5301, 5302, 5303, 5304,            Program Management account) was                       create marketing strategies to avoid
     5305(a), 5306(a), 5307(a), and 5309(b).                                                                       high-risk enrollees. Use of an after-the-
       7 See 42 U.S.C. 18063.
                                                             potentially available for risk adjustment
       8 Compare 42 U.S.C. 18063 (failing to specify         payments. The lump sum appropriation                  fact balancing adjustment is also less
     source of funding other than risk adjustment            for each year was not enacted until after             predictable for issuers than a
     charges), with 42 U.S.C. 1395w–116(c)(3)                the applicable rule announcing the
     (authorizing appropriations for Medicare Part D risk    HHS-operated methodology for the                        9 See for example, September 12, 2011, Risk

     adjusted payments); 42 U.S.C. 1395w–115(a)                                                                    Adjustment Implementation Issues White Paper,
     (establishing ‘‘budget authority in advance of
                                                             applicable benefit year, and therefore                available at https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/
     appropriations Acts’’ for Medicare Part D risk          could not have been relied upon in                    Files/Downloads/riskadjustment_whitepaper_
     adjusted payments).                                     promulgating that rule. Additionally, as              web.pdf.



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     63422              Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 236 / Monday, December 10, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

     methodology that is established before                     premium increase, which could make                        We summarize and respond to the
     the benefit year. We explained that such                   coverage in those plans particularly                   comments received to the proposed rule
     predictability is important to serving the                 unaffordable for unsubsidized enrollees.               below. Given the volume of exhibits,
     risk adjustment program’s goals of                         In states with limited Exchange options,               court filings, white papers (including all
     premium stabilization and reducing                         a qualified health plan issuer exit would              corresponding exhibits), and comments
     issuer incentives to avoid enrolling                       restrict consumer choice, and could put                on other rulemakings incorporated by
     higher-risk populations.                                   additional upward pressure on                          reference in one commenter’s letter, we
        Additionally, the proposed rule noted                   premiums, thereby increasing the cost of               are not able to separately address each
     that using a plan’s own premium to                         coverage for unsubsidized individuals                  of those documents. Instead, we
     scale transfers may provide additional                     and federal spending for premium tax                   summarize and respond to the
     incentives for plans with high-risk                        credits. The combination of these effects              significant comments and issues raised
     enrollees to increase premiums in order                    could lead to involuntary coverage                     by the commenter that are within the
     to receive higher risk adjustment                          losses in certain state market risk pools.             scope of this rulemaking.
     payments. As noted by commenters to                           Additionally, the proposed rule                        Comment: One commenter expressed
     the 2014 Payment Notice proposed rule,                     explained that HHS’s failure to make                   general concerns about policymaking
     transfers also may be more volatile from                   timely risk adjustment payments could                  and implementation of the PPACA
     year to year and sensitive to anomalous                    impact the solvency of issuers providing               related to enrollment activity changes,
     premiums if they were scaled to a plan’s                   coverage to sicker (and costlier) than                 cost-sharing reductions, and short-term,
     own premium instead of the statewide                       average enrollees that require the influx              limited-duration plans.
     average premium. In the 2014 Payment                       of risk adjustment payments to continue                   Response: The use of statewide
     Notice final rule, we noted that we                        operations. When state regulators                      average premium in the HHS-operated
     received a number of comments in                           evaluate issuer solvency, any                          risk adjustment methodology, including
     support of our proposal to use statewide                   uncertainty surrounding risk adjustment                the operation of the program in a
     average premium as the basis for risk                      transfers hampers their ability to make                budget-neutral manner, which was the
     adjustment transfers, while some                           decisions that protect consumers and                   limited subject of the proposed
     commenters expressed a desire for HHS                      support the long-term health of                        rulemaking, was not addressed by this
     to use a plan’s own premium.10 HHS                         insurance markets.                                     commenter. In fact, the commenter did
     addressed those comments by                                                                                       not specifically address the risk
                                                                   In response to the district court’s
     reiterating that we had considered the                                                                            adjustment program at all. Therefore,
                                                                February 2018 decision that vacated the
     use of a plan’s own premium, but chose                                                                            the concerns raised by this commenter
                                                                use of statewide average premium in the
     to use statewide average premium, as                                                                              are outside the scope of the proposed
                                                                risk adjustment methodology on the
     this approach supports the overall goals                                                                          rule, and are not addressed in this final
                                                                grounds that HHS did not adequately                    rule.
     of the risk adjustment program to
                                                                explain its decision to adopt that aspect                 Comment: Commenters were
     encourage issuers to rate for the average
                                                                of the methodology, we offered the                     overwhelmingly in favor of HHS
     risk in the applicable state market risk
                                                                additional explanation outlined above                  finalizing the rule as proposed, and
     pool, and avoids the creation of
                                                                in the proposed rule, and proposed to                  many encouraged HHS to do so as soon
     incentives for issuers to employ risk-
                                                                maintain the use of statewide average                  as possible. Many commenters stated
     avoidance techniques.11
        The proposed rule also explained that                   premium in the applicable state market                 that by finalizing this rule as proposed,
     although HHS has not yet calculated                        risk pool for the state payment transfer               HHS is providing an additional
     risk adjustment payments and charges                       formula under the HHS-operated risk                    explanation regarding the operation of
     for the 2018 benefit year, immediate                       adjustment methodology for the 2018                    the program in a budget-neutral manner
     administrative action was imperative to                    benefit year. HHS proposed to adopt the                and the use of statewide average
     maintain stability and predictability in                   methodology previously established for                 premium for the 2018 benefit year
     the individual, small group and merged                     the 2018 benefit year in the Federal                   consistent with the decision of the
     insurance markets. Without                                 Register publications cited above that                 district court, and is reducing the risk of
     administrative action, the uncertainty                     apply to the calculation, collection, and              substantial instability to the Exchanges
     related to the HHS-operated risk                           payment of risk adjustment transfers                   and individual and small group and
     adjustment methodology for the 2018                        under the HHS-operated methodology                     merged market risk pools. Many
     benefit year could add uncertainty to                      for the 2018 benefit year. This included               commenters stated that no changes
     the individual, small group and merged                     the adjustment to the statewide average                should be made to the risk adjustment
     markets, as issuers determine the extent                   premium, reducing it by 14 percent, to                 methodology for the 2018 benefit year
     of their market participation and the                      account for an estimated proportion of                 because issuers’ rates for the 2018
     rates and benefit designs for plans they                   administrative costs that do not vary                  benefit year were set based on the
     will offer in future benefit years.                        with claims.12 We sought comment on                    previously finalized methodology.
     Without certainty regarding the 2018                       the proposal to use statewide average                     Response: We agree that a prompt
     benefit year HHS-operated risk                             premium. However, in order to protect                  finalization of this rule is important to
     adjustment methodology, there was a                        the settled expectations of issuers that               ensure the ongoing stability of the
     serious risk that issuers would                            structured their pricing, offering, and                individual and small group and merged
     substantially increase future premiums                     market participation decisions in                      markets, and the ability of HHS to
     to account for the potential of                            reliance on the previously issued 2018                 continue operations of the risk
     uncompensated risk associated with                         benefit year methodology, all other                    adjustment program normally for the
     high-risk enrollees. Consumers enrolled                    aspects of the risk adjustment                         2018 benefit year. We also agree that
     in certain plans with benefit and                          methodology were outside of the scope                  finalizing the rule as proposed would
     network structures that appeal to higher                   of the proposed rule, and HHS did not                  maintain stability and ensure
     risk enrollees could see a significant                     seek comment on those finalized                        predictability of pricing in a budget-
                                                                aspects.                                               neutral framework because issuers
       10 78    FR 15410, 15432.                                                                                       relied on the 2018 HHS-operated risk
       11 Id.                                                     12 See   81 FR 94058 at 94099.                       adjustment methodology that used


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                      Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 236 / Monday, December 10, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                       63423

     statewide average premium during rate                   any potential shortfalls. The commenter               alternatives to the establishment of a
     setting and when deciding in calendar                   also stated that the rationale for using              budget-neutral framework. All of these
     year 2017 whether to participate in the                 statewide average premium to achieve                  after-the-fact balancing adjustments
     market(s) during the 2018 benefit year.                 budget neutrality is incorrect, and that              were ultimately rejected because they
        Comment: Several commenters agreed                   even if budget neutrality is required,                are less predictable for issuers than a
     with HHS’s interpretation of the statute                any risk adjustment payment shortfalls                budget-neutral methodology which does
     as requiring the operation of the risk                  that may result from using a plan’s own               not require after-the-fact balancing
     adjustment program in a budget-neutral                  premium in the risk adjustment transfer               adjustments, a conclusion supported by
     manner; several cited the absence of                    formula could be addressed through pro                the vast majority of comments received.
     additional funding which would cover                    rata adjustments to risk adjustment                   As detailed in the proposed rule, HHS
     any possible shortfall between risk                     transfers. This commenter also stated                 determined it would not be appropriate
     adjustment transfers as supporting the                  that the use of statewide average                     to rely on the CMS Program
     operation of the program in a budget-                   premium is not predictable for issuers                Management account because those
     neutral manner. One commenter                           trying to set rates, especially for small             amounts are designated for
     highlighted that appropriations can vary                issuers which do not have a large                     administration and operational
     from year to year, adding uncertainty                   market share, as they do not have                     expenses, not program payments, nor
     and instability to the market(s) if the                 information about other issuers’ rates at             would the CMS Program Management
     program relied on additional funding to                 the time of rate setting. Conversely,                 account be sufficient to fund both the
     cover potential shortfalls and was not                  many commenters noted that, absent an                 payments under the risk adjustment
     operated in a budget-neutral manner,                    appropriation for risk adjustment                     program and those administrative and
     which in turn would affect issuer                       payments, the prorated payments that                  operational expenses. Furthermore, use
     pricing decisions. These commenters                     would result from the use of a plan’s                 of such funds would create the same
     noted that any uncertainty about                        own premium in the risk adjustment                    uncertainty and other challenges
     whether Congress would fund risk                        methodology would add an unnecessary                  described above, as it would require
     adjustment payments would deprive                       layer of complexity for issuers when                  reliance on the annual appropriations
     issuers of the ability to make pricing                  pricing and would reduce predictability,              process and would require after-the-fact
     and market participation decisions                      resulting in uncertainty and instability              balancing adjustments to address
     based on a legitimate expectation that                  in the market(s).                                     shortfalls. After extensive analysis and
     risk adjustment transfers would occur as                                                                      evaluation of alternatives, we
     required in HHS regulations. Other                         Response: We acknowledged in the
                                                             proposed rule that the PPACA did not                  determined that the best method
     commenters noted that without                                                                                 consistent with legal requirements is to
     certainty of risk adjustment transfers,                 include a provision that explicitly
                                                             required the risk adjustment program be               operate the risk adjustment program in
     issuers would likely seek rate increases                                                                      a budget-neutral manner, using
     to account for this further uncertainty                 operated in a budget-neutral manner;
                                                             however, HHS was constrained by                       statewide average premium as the cost
     and the risk of enrolling a greater share                                                                     scaling factor and normalizing the risk
     of high-cost individuals. Alternatively,                appropriations law to devise a risk
                                                             adjustment methodology that could be                  adjustment payment transfer formula to
     issuers seeking to avoid significant                                                                          reflect state average factors.
     premium increases would be compelled                    implemented in a budget-neutral
     to develop alternative coverage                         fashion. In fact, Congress did not                       We agree with the commenters that
     arrangements that fail to provide                       authorize or appropriate additional                   calculating transfers based on a plan’s
     adequate coverage to people with                        funding for risk adjustment beyond the                own premium without an additional
     chronic conditions or high health care                  amount of charges paid in, and did not                funding source to ensure full payment
     costs (for example, narrow networks or                  authorize HHS to obligate itself for risk             of risk adjustment payment amounts
     formulary design changes). Another                      adjustment payments in excess of                      would create premium instability. If
     commenter pointed to the fact that risk                 charges collected. In the absence of                  HHS implemented an approach based
     adjustment was envisioned by Congress                   additional, independent funding or the                on a plan’s own premium without an
     as being run by the states, and that if                 creation of budget authority in advance               additional funding source, after-the-fact
     HHS were to require those states that                   of an appropriation, HHS could not                    payment adjustments would be
     run their own program to cover any                      make payments in excess of charges                    required. As explained above, the
     shortfall between what they collect and                 collected consistent with binding                     amount of these payment adjustments
     what they must pay out, HHS would                       appropriations law. Furthermore, we                   would vary from year to year, would
     effectively be imposing an unfunded                     agree with commenters that the creation               delay the publication of final risk
     mandate on states. The commenter                        of a methodology that was contingent on               adjustment amounts, and would compel
     noted there is no indication that                       Congress agreeing to appropriate                      issuers with risk that is higher than the
     Congress intended risk adjustment to                    supplemental funding of unknown                       state average to speculate on the
     impose such an unfunded mandate.                        amounts through the annual                            premium increase that would be
     Another commenter expressed that a                      appropriations process would create                   necessary to cover an unknown risk
     budget-neutral framework was the most                   uncertainty. It would also delay the                  adjustment payment shortfall amount.
     natural reading of the PPACA, with a                    process for setting the parameters for                We considered and ultimately declined
     different commenter stating this                        any potential risk adjustment proration               to adopt a methodology that required an
     framework is implied in the statute.                    until well after rates were set and the               after-the-fact balancing adjustment
        However, one commenter stated that                   plans were in effect for the applicable               because such an approach is less
     risk adjustment does not need to operate                benefit year. In addition to proration of             predictable for issuers than a budget-
     as budget neutral, as section 1343 of the               risk adjustment payments to balance                   neutral methodology that can be
     PPACA does not require that the                         risk adjustment transfer amounts, we                  calculated in advance of a benefit year.
     program be budget neutral, and funds                    considered the impact of assessing                    This included consideration of a non-
     are available to HHS for the risk                       additional charges or otherwise                       budget neutral HHS-operated risk
     adjustment program from the CMS                         collecting additional funds from issuers              adjustment methodology that used a
     Program Management account to offset                    of risk adjustment covered plans as                   plan’s own premiums as the cost-scaling


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     63424            Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 236 / Monday, December 10, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

     factor, which we discuss in detail later                transfers.13 It also pointed to the                    determining whether an issuer’s low
     in this preamble. Modifying the 2018                    American Academy of Actuaries’                         premium was the result of efficiency,
     benefit year risk adjustment                            analysis of 2014 benefit year risk                     mispricing, or a strategy to gain market
     methodology to use a plan’s own                         adjustment results, in which 103 of 163                share, and that the advantages of using
     premium would reduce the                                small health plans (those with less than               statewide average premium outweigh
     predictability of risk adjustment                       10 percent of market share) received risk              the possibility that use of a plan’s own
     payments and charges significantly. As                  adjustment payments and the average                    premium could result in better
     commenters stated, the use of a plan’s                  payment was 27 percent of premium.14                   reflection of cost management. One
     own premium would add an extra layer                    This commenter cited these points as                   commenter noted that encouraging
     of complexity in estimating risk                        evidence that risk adjustment is working               issuers to set premiums based on market
     adjustment transfers because payments                   as intended for small issuers. This                    averages in a state (that is, using
     and charges would need to be prorated                   commenter also cited an Oliver Wyman                   statewide average premium) promotes
     retrospectively based on the outcome of                 study that analyzed risk adjustment                    market competition based on value,
     risk adjustment transfer calculations,                  receipts by health plan member months                  quality of care provided, and effective
     but would need to be anticipated in                     (that is, issuer size) and found no                    care management, not on the basis of
     advance of the applicable benefit year                  systematic bias in the 2014 risk                       risk selection. Other commenters
     for use in issuers’ pricing calculations.               adjustment model.15                                    strongly opposed the use of a plan’s
     We do not agree with the commenter                         A few commenters stated that use of                 own premium, as doing so would
     that statewide average premium is less                  statewide average premium to scale risk                introduce incentives for issuers to
     predictable than a plan’s own premium,                  adjustment transfers tends to penalize                 attract lower-risk enrollees because they
     as the use of statewide average premium                 issuers with efficient care management                 would no longer have to pay their fair
     under a budget-neutral framework                        and lower premiums and rewards                         share, or because issuers that
     makes risk adjustment transfers self-                   issuers for raising rates. One of the                  traditionally attract high-risk enrollees
     balancing, and provides payment                         commenters also stated that the HHS-                   would be incentivized to increase
     certainty for issuers with higher-than-                 operated risk adjustment methodology                   premiums in order to receive larger risk
     average risk.                                           does not reflect relative actuarial risk,              adjustment payments. Others stated that
        After considering the comments                       that statewide average premium harms                   the use of a plan’s own premium would
     submitted, we are finalizing a                          issuers that price below the statewide                 add an extra layer of complexity in
     methodology that operates risk                          average, and that the program does not                 estimating risk adjustment transfers, and
     adjustment in a budget-neutral manner                   differentiate between an issuer that has               therefore in premium rate setting,
     using statewide average premium as the                  lower premiums because of medical cost                 because payments and charges would
     cost scaling factor and normalizing the                 savings from better care coordination                  need to be prorated retrospectively
     risk adjustment payment transfer                        and an issuer that has lower premiums                  based on the outcome of risk adjustment
     formula to reflect state average factors                because of healthier-than-average                      transfer calculations, but would need to
     for the 2018 benefit year.                              enrollees. The commenter suggested                     be anticipated prospectively as part of
        Comment: The majority of the                         that HHS add a Care Management                         issuers’ pricing calculations.
     comments supported the use of                           Effectiveness index into the risk                         One commenter expressed concern
     statewide average premium in the HHS-                   adjustment formula. This commenter                     that the risk adjustment payment
     operated risk adjustment methodology                    also stated that use of a plan’s own                   transfer formula exaggerates plan
     for the 2018 benefit year. Some                         premium rather than statewide average                  differences in risk because it does not
     commenters stated that the risk                         premium could improve the risk                         address plan coding differences.
     adjustment program is working as                        adjustment formula, stating that issuers                  Response: We agree with the majority
     intended, by compensating issuers                       would not be able to inflate their                     of commenters that use of statewide
     based on their enrollees’ health status,                premiums to ‘‘game’’ the risk                          average premium will maintain the
     that is, transferring funds from issuers                adjustment system due to other PPACA                   integrity of the risk adjustment program
     with predominately low-risk enrollees                   requirements such as medical loss ratio,               by discouraging the creation of benefit
     to those with a higher-than-average                     rate review, and essential health                      designs and marketing strategies to
     share of high-risk enrollees. One                       benefits, as well as state insurance                   avoid high-risk enrollees and promoting
     commenter stated that the program has                   regulations, including oversight of                    market stability and predictability. The
     been highly effective at reducing loss-                 marketing practices intended to avoid                  benefits of using statewide average
     ratios and ensuring that issuers can                    sicker enrollees.                                      premium as the cost scaling factor in the
     operate efficiently, without concern for                   However, other commenters opposed                   risk adjustment state payment transfer
     significant swings in risk from year to                 the use of a plan’s own premium in the                 formula extend beyond its role in
     year. Although some commenters                          risk adjustment formula based on a                     maintaining the budget neutrality of the
     requested refinements to ensure that the                concern that it would undermine the                    program. Consistent with the statute,
     methodology does not unintentionally                    risk adjustment program and create                     under the HHS-operated risk adjustment
     harm smaller, newer, or innovative                      incentives for issuers to avoid enrolling              program, each plan in the risk pool
     issuers, a different commenter noted                    high-cost individuals. Some                            receives a risk adjustment payment or
     that the results for all prior benefit years            commenters noted the difficulty of                     charge designed to take into account the
     of the risk adjustment program do not                                                                          plan’s risk compared to a plan with
     support the assertion that the risk                       13 Available at https://downloads.cms.gov/cciio/
                                                                                                                    average risk. The statewide average
     adjustment methodology undermines                       Summary-Report-Risk-Adjustment-2017.pdf.               premium reflects the statewide average
                                                               14 American Academy of Actuaries, ‘‘Insights on
     small health plans. This commenter                      the ACA Risk Adjustment Program,’’ April 2016.
                                                                                                                    cost and efficiency level and acts as the
     noted that the July 9, 2018 ‘‘Summary                   Available at http://actuary.org/files/imce/Insights_   cost scaling factor in the state payment
     Report on Permanent Risk Adjustment                     on_the_ACA_Risk_Adjustment_Program.pdf.                transfer formula under the HHS-
     Transfers for the 2017 Benefit Year’’                     15 Oliver Wyman, ‘‘A Story in 4 Charts, Risk
                                                                                                                    operated risk adjustment methodology.
     found a very strong correlation between                 Adjustment in the Non-Group Market in 2014,’’          HHS chose to use statewide average
                                                             February 24, 2016. Available at https://
     the amount of paid claims and the                       health.oliverwyman.com/2016/02/a_story_in_four_        premium to encourage issuers to rate for
     direction and scale of risk adjustment                  char.html.                                             the average risk, to automatically


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                       Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 236 / Monday, December 10, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                             63425

     achieve equality between risk                            issuer has lower premiums than the                       relative to the average that can be
     adjustment payments and charges in                       average, since an issuer’s low premium                   assigned to each enrollee. We then use
     each benefit year, and to avoid the                      could be the result of efficiency,                       an enrollee’s plan selection and
     creation of incentives for issuers to                    mispricing, or a strategy to gain market                 diagnoses during the benefit year to
     operate less efficiently, set higher                     share. In all, the advantages of using                   assign a risk score. Although the HHS
     prices, or develop benefits designs or                   statewide average premium outweigh                       risk adjustment models are calibrated on
     create marketing strategies to avoid                     the possibility that the use of a plan’s                 national data, and average costs can
     high-risk enrollees.                                     own premium could result in better                       vary between geographic areas, relative
        HHS considered and again declined                     reflection of care or cost management,                   actuarial risk differences are generally
     in the 2018 Payment Notice to adopt the                  given the overall disadvantages,                         similar nationally. The solved
     use of each plan’s own premium in the                    outlined above, of using a plan’s own                    coefficients from the risk adjustment
     state payment transfer formula.16 As we                  premium. HHS does not agree that use                     models are then used to evaluate
     noted in the 2018 Payment Notice, use                    of statewide average premium penalizes                   actuarial risk differences between plans.
     of a plan’s own premium would likely                     efficient issuers or that it rewards                     The risk adjustment state payment
     lead to substantial volatility in transfer               issuers for raising rates.                               transfer formula then further evaluates
     results and could result in even higher                     Consistent with the 2018 Payment                      the plan’s actuarial risk based on
     transfer charges for low-risk, low-                      Notice,17 beginning with the 2018                        enrollees’ health risk, after accounting
     premium plans because of the program’s                   benefit year, this final rule adopts the 14              for factors a plan could have rated for,
     budget neutrality. Under such an                         percent reduction to the statewide                       including metal level, the prevailing
     approach, high-risk, high-premium                        average premium to account for                           level of expenditures in the geographic
     plans would require even greater                         administrative costs that are unrelated                  areas in which the enrollees live, the
     transfer payments. If HHS applied a                      to the claims risk of the enrollee                       effect of coverage on utilization
     balancing adjustment in favor of these                   population. While low cost plans are                     (induced demand), and the age and
     plans to maintain the budget-neutral                     not necessarily efficient plans,18 we                    family structure of the subscribers. This
     nature of the program after transfers                    believe this adjustment differentiates                   relative plan actuarial risk difference
     have been calculated using a plan’s own                  between premiums that reflect savings                    compared to the state market risk pool
     premium, low-risk, low-premium plans                     resulting from administrative efficiency                 average is then scaled to the statewide
     would be required to pay in an even                      from premiums that reflect healthier-                    average premium. The use of statewide
     higher percentage of their plan-specific                 than-average enrollees. As detailed in                   average premium as a cost-scaling factor
     premiums in risk adjustment transfer                     the 2018 Payment Notice,19 to derive                     requires plans to assess actuarial risk,
     charges due to the need to maintain                      this parameter, we analyzed                              and therefore scales transfers to
     budget neutrality. Furthermore,                          administrative and other non-claims                      actuarial differences between plans in
     payments to high-risk, low-premium                       expenses in the Medical Loss Ratio                       state market risk pool(s), rather than
     plans that are presumably more efficient                 (MLR) Annual Reporting Form and                          differences in premium.
     than high-risk, high-premium plans                       estimated, by category, the extent to
     would be reduced, incentivizing such                                                                                 We have been continuously
                                                              which the expenses varied with claims.                   evaluating whether improvements are
     plans to inflate premiums. In other                      We compared those expenses to the
     words, the use of a plan’s own premium                                                                            needed to the risk adjustment
                                                              total costs that issuers finance through                 methodology, and will continue to do so
     in this scenario would neither reduce                    premiums, including claims,
     risk adjustment charges for low-cost and                                                                          as additional years’ data become
                                                              administrative expenses, and taxes, and                  available. We decline to amend the risk
     low-risk issuers, nor would it                           determined that the mean
     incentivize issuers to operate at the                                                                             adjustment methodology to include the
                                                              administrative cost percentage in the                    Care Management Effectiveness index or
     average efficiency. Alternatively,                       individual, small group and merged
     application of a balancing adjustment in                                                                          a similar adjustment at this time. Doing
                                                              markets is approximately 14 percent.                     so would be beyond the scope of this
     favor of low-risk, low-premium plans                     We believe this amount represents a
     could have the effect of under-                                                                                   rulemaking, which addresses the use of
                                                              reasonable percentage of administrative                  statewide average premium and the
     compensating high-risk plans,                            costs on which risk adjustment should
     increasing the likelihood that such                                                                               operation of the risk adjustment
                                                              not be calculated.                                       program in a budget-neutral manner. A
     plans would raise premiums. In                              We disagree that the HHS-operated
     addition, if the application of a                                                                                 change of this magnitude would require
                                                              risk adjustment methodology does not                     significant study and evaluation.
     balancing adjustment was split equally                   reflect relative actuarial risk or that the
     between high-risk and low-risk plans,                                                                             Although this type of change is not
                                                              use of statewide average premium                         feasible at present, we will examine the
     such an after-the-fact adjustment, would                 indicates otherwise. In fact, the risk
     create uncertainty and instability in the                                                                         feasibility, specificity, and sensitivity of
                                                              adjustment models estimate a plan’s                      measuring care management
     market(s), and would incentivize issuers
                                                              relative actuarial risk across actuarial                 effectiveness through enrollee-level
     to increase premiums to receive
                                                              value metal levels, also referred to as                  EDGE data for the individual, small
     additional risk adjustment payments or
                                                              ‘‘simulated plan liability,’’ by estimating              group and merged markets, and the
     to employ risk-avoidance techniques. As
                                                              the total costs a plan is expected to be                 benefits of incorporating such measures
     such, we agree with the commenters
                                                              liable for based on its enrollees’ age, sex,             in the risk adjustment methodology in
     that challenges associated with pricing
                                                              hierarchical condition categories                        future benefit years, either through
     for transfers based on a plan’s own
                                                              (HCCs), actuarial value, and cost-sharing                rulemaking or other opportunities in
     premium would create pricing
                                                              structure. Therefore, this ‘‘simulated                   which the public can submit comments.
     instability in the market, and introduce
                                                              plan liability’’ reflects the actuarial risk             We believe that a robust risk adjustment
     incentives for issuers to attract lower-
     risk enrollees to avoid paying their fair                  17 81
                                                                                                                       program encourages issuers to adopt
                                                                       FR 94099.
     share. We also agree that it is very                       18 If
                                                                                                                       incentives to improve care management
                                                                      a plan is a low-cost plan with low claims
     difficult to determine the reason an                     costs, it could be an indication of mispricing, as the   effectiveness, as doing so would reduce
                                                              issuer should be pricing for average risk.               plans’ medical costs. As we stated
       16 81   FR 94100.                                         19 81 FR 94100.                                       above, use of statewide average


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     63426            Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 236 / Monday, December 10, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

     premium in the risk adjustment state                    in lawsuits other than the New Mexico                 percent to account for the proportion of
     payment transfer formula incentivizes                   case. One commenter further requested                 administrative costs that do not vary
     plans to apply effective care                           that HHS reopen rulemaking                            with claims, beginning with the 2018
     management techniques to reduce                         proceedings, reconsider, and revise the               benefit year.21 HHS also modified the
     losses, whereas use of a plan’s own                     Payment Notices for the 2017 and 2019                 risk adjustment methodology by
     premium could be inflationary as it                     benefit years under section 553(e) of the             incorporating a high-cost risk pool
     benefits plans with higher-than-average                 Administrative Procedure Act.                         calculation to mitigate residual
     costs and higher-than-average                              Response: We appreciate the feedback               incentive for risk selection to avoid
     premiums.                                               on potential improvements to the risk                 high-cost enrollees, to better account for
        We are sympathetic to commenters’                    adjustment program, and will continue                 the average risk associated with the
     concerns about plan coding differences,                 to consider the suggestions, analysis,                factors used in the HHS risk adjustment
     and recognize that there is substantial                 and comments received from                            models, and to ensure that the actuarial
     variation in provider coding practices.                 commenters for potential changes to                   risk of a plan with high-cost enrollees is
     We are continuing to strengthen the risk                future benefit years. This rulemaking is              better reflected in risk adjustment
     adjustment data validation program to                   intended to provide additional                        transfers to issuers with high actuarial
     ensure that conditions reported for risk                explanation regarding the operation of                risk.22 Other recent changes made to the
     adjustment are accurately coded and                     the program in a budget-neutral manner                HHS-operated risk adjustment
     supported by medical records, and will                  and the use of statewide average                      methodology include the incorporation
     adjust risk scores (and subsequently,                   premium for the 2018 benefit year,                    of a partial year adjustment factor and
     risk adjustment transfers) beginning                    consistent with the February 2018                     prescription drug utilization factors.23
     with 2017 benefit year data validation                  decision of the district court. It also               Furthermore, as outlined above, HHS
     results to encourage issuers to continue                requires an expedited timeframe to                    stated in the 2019 Payment Notice that
     to improve the accuracy of data used to                 maintain stability in the health                      it would recalibrate the risk adjustment
     compile risk scores and preserve                        insurance markets following the district              model using 2016 enrollee-level EDGE
     confidence in the HHS-operated risk                     court’s vacatur of the use of statewide               data to better reflect individual, small
     adjustment program.                                     average premium in the HHS-operated                   group and merged market
        Comment: Some commenters                             risk adjustment methodology for the                   populations.24 We also consistently seek
     provided suggestions to improve the                     2018 benefit year. We intend to                       methods to support states’ authority and
     risk adjustment methodology, such as                    continue to evaluate approaches to                    provide states with flexible options,
     different weights for metal tiers,                      improve the risk adjustment models’                   while ensuring the success of the risk
     multiple mandatory data submission                      calibration to reflect the individual,                adjustment program.25 We respond to
     deadlines, reducing the magnitude of                    small group and merged markets                        comments regarding options available to
     risk scores across the board, and fully                 actuarial risk and review additional                  states with respect to the risk
     removing administrative expenses from                   years’ data as they become available to               adjustment program below. We
     the statewide average premium. One                      evaluate all aspects of the HHS-operated              appreciate the commenters’ input and
     commenter stated that, while it did not                 risk adjustment methodology. We also                  will continue to examine options for
     conceptually take issue with the use of                 continue to encourage issuers to submit               potential changes to the HHS-operated
     statewide average premium, the                          EDGE server data earlier and more                     risk adjustment methodology in future
     payment transfer formula under the                      completely for future benefit years.                  notice with comment rulemaking.
     HHS-operated risk adjustment                            However, the scope of the proposed rule                  The requests related to the 2017 and
     methodology creates market distortions                  was limited to the use of statewide                   2019 benefit year rulemakings are
     and causes overstatement of relative risk               average premium and the budget-neutral                outside the scope of the proposed rule
     differences among issuers. This                         nature of the risk adjustment program                 and this final rule, which is limited to
     commenter cited concerns with the use                   for the 2018 benefit year, and                        the 2018 benefit year.
     of the Truven MarketScan® data to                       consequently, we decline to adopt the                    Comment: One commenter suggested
     calculate plan risk scores under the                    various suggestions offered by                        that states should have broad authority
     HHS risk adjustment models, and                         commenters regarding potential                        to cap and limit risk adjustment
     suggested incorporating an adjustment                   improvements to the 2018 benefit year                 transfers and charges as necessary,
     to the calculation of plan risk scores                  HHS-operated risk adjustment                          stating that the requirements associated
     until the MarketScan® data is no longer                 methodology as to other issues because                with the flexibility HHS granted to
     used.                                                   they are outside the scope of this rule.              states to request a reduction to risk
        A few commenters stressed the                           We reiterate that HHS is always                    adjustment transfers beginning in 2020
     importance of making changes                            considering possible ways to improve                  are too onerous and unclear. The
     thoughtfully and over time, and one                     the risk adjustment methodology for                   commenter noted that state regulators
     encouraged HHS to actively seek                         future benefit years. For example, in the             know their markets best and should
     improvements to avoid unnecessary                       2018 Payment Notice, based on                         have the discretion and authority to
     litigation. Several commenters, while                   comments received for the 2017                        implement their own remedial measures
     supportive of the proposed rule and its                 Payment Notice and the March 31, 2016,                without seeking HHS’s permission.
     use for the 2018 benefit year, generally                HHS-Operated Risk Adjustment                          Conversely, one commenter specifically
     stated that the risk adjustment                         Methodology Meeting Discussion                        supported the state flexibility policy set
     methodology should continue to be                       Paper,20 HHS made multiple                            forth in § 153.320(d). A few commenters
     improved prospectively. Another                                                                               requested that states be allowed to
                                                             adjustments to the risk adjustment
     commenter stated that the proposed rule                                                                       establish alternatives to statewide
                                                             models and state payment transfer
     did not do enough to improve the risk
                                                             formula, including reducing the
     adjustment program, and encouraged
                                                             statewide average premium by 14                         21 See  81 FR 94100.
     HHS to review and consider suggestions                                                                          22 See  81 FR 94080.
     to improve the risk adjustment                            20 https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Forms-         23 See 81 FR at 94071 and 94074.

     methodology in order to promote                         Reports-and-Other-Resources/Downloads/RA-               24 See 83 FR 16940.

     stability and address the concerns raised               March-31-White-Paper-032416.pdf.                        25 Id. and 81 FR 29146.




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                      Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 236 / Monday, December 10, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                         63427

     average premium, with one suggesting                    along with any lessons learned from                   states may request a reduction in the
     that this change begin with the 2020                    2020 benefit year requests.                           transfer amounts calculated under the
     benefit year, and providing as an                          HHS has consistently acknowledged                  HHS-operated methodology to address
     example the idea that HHS could permit                  the role of states as primary regulators 29           state-specific rules or market dynamics
     states to aggregate the average premiums                of their insurance markets, and we                    to more precisely account for the
     of two or more distinct geographic                      continue to encourage states to examine               expected cost of relative risk differences
     markets within a state.                                 local approaches under state legal                    in the state’s market risk pool(s).
        Response: HHS continually seeks to                   authority as they deem appropriate.                      Finally, HHS has consistently sought
     provide states with flexibility to                         Comment: One commenter detailed                    to increase the predictability and
     determine what is best for their state                  the impact of the HHS-operated risk                   certainty of transfer amounts in order to
     markets. Section 1343 of the PPACA                      adjustment methodology on the                         promote the premium stabilization goal
     provides states authority to operate their              commenter, the CO–OP program’s                        of the risk adjustment program.
     own state risk adjustment programs.                     general struggles, and the challenges                 Statewide average premium provides
     Under this authority, a state remains                   faced by some non-CO–OP issuers,                      greater predictability of an issuer’s final
     free to elect to operate the risk                       stating that this is evidence that the                risk adjustment receivables than use of
     adjustment program and tailor it to its                 HHS-operated risk adjustment                          a plan’s own premium, and we disagree
     markets, which could include                            methodology is flawed. The commenter                  with comments stating that the use of a
     establishing alternatives to the statewide              urged HHS to make changes discussed                   plan’s own premium in the risk
     average premium methodology or                          above to the methodology to address                   adjustment transfer formula would
     aggregating the average premiums of                     what it maintains are unintended                      result in greater predictability in
     two or more distinct geographic markets                 financial impacts on small issuers that               pricing. As discussed previously, if a
     within a state. If a state does not elect               are required to pay large risk adjustment             plan’s own premium is used as a scaling
     to operate the risk adjustment program,                 charges, and also challenged the                      factor, risk adjustment transfers would
     HHS is required to do so.26 No state                    assertion that the current risk                       not be budget neutral. After-the-fact
     elected to operate the risk adjustment                  adjustment methodology is predictable.                adjustments would be necessary in
     program for the 2018 benefit year;                         Response: HHS previously recognized                order for issuers to receive the full
     therefore, HHS is responsible for                       and acknowledged that certain issuers,                amount of calculated payments, creating
     operating the program in all 50 states                  including a limited number of newer,                  uncertainty and lack of predictability.
     and the District of Columbia.                           rapidly growing, or smaller issuers,
        In the 2019 Payment Notice, HHS                      owed substantial risk adjustment                      III. Provisions of the Final Regulations
     adopted § 153.320(d) to provide states                  charges that they did not anticipate in                 After consideration of the comments
     the flexibility, when HHS is operating                  the initial years of the program. HHS                 received, this final rule adopts the HHS-
     the risk adjustment program, to request                 has regularly discussed with issuers and              operated risk adjustment methodology
     a reduction to the otherwise applicable                 state regulators ways to encourage new                for the 2018 benefit year which utilizes
     risk adjustment transfers in the                        participation in the health insurance                 statewide average premium and
     individual, small group, or merged                      markets and to mitigate the effects of                operates the program in a budget-neutral
     markets by up to 50 percent.27 This                     substantial risk adjustment charges.                  manner, as established in the final rules
     flexibility was established to provide                  Program results discussed earlier have                published in the March 23, 2012 and the
     states the opportunity to seek state-                   shown that the risk adjustment                        December 22, 2016 editions of the
     specific adjustments to the HHS-                        methodology has worked as intended,                   Federal Register.
     operated risk adjustment methodology                    that risk adjustment transfers correlate
     without the necessity of operating their                                                                      IV. Collection of Information
                                                             with the amount of paid claims rather
     own risk adjustment programs. It is                                                                           Requirements
                                                             than issuer size, and that no systemic
     offered beginning with the 2020 benefit                 bias is found when risk adjustment                      This document does not impose
     year risk adjustment transfers and, since               receipts are analyzed by health plan                  information collection requirements,
     it involves an adjustment to the                        member months. We created an interim                  that is, reporting, recordkeeping, or
     transfers calculated by HHS, it will                    risk adjustment reporting process,                    third-party disclosure requirements.
     require review and approval by HHS.                     beginning with the 2015 benefit year, to              Consequently, there is no need for
     States requesting such reductions must                  provide issuers and states with                       review by the Office of Management and
     substantiate the transfer reduction                     preliminary information about the                     Budget under the authority of the
     requested and demonstrate that the                      applicable benefit year’s geographic cost             Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44
     actuarial risk differences in plans in the              factor, billable member months, and                   U.S.C. 3501, et seq.).
     applicable state market risk pool are                   state averages such as monthly
     attributable to factors other than                                                                            V. Regulatory Impact Analysis
                                                             premiums, plan liability risk score,
     systematic risk selection.28 The process                allowable rating factor, actuarial value,             A. Statement of Need
     will give HHS the necessary information                 and induced demand factors by market.
     to evaluate the flexibility requests. We                                                                         The proposed rule and this final rule
                                                             States may pursue local approaches                    were published in light of the February
     appreciate the comments offered on this                 under state legal authority to address
     flexibility, but note that they are outside                                                                   2018 district court decision described
                                                             concerns related to insolvencies and                  above that vacated the use of statewide
     the scope of the proposed rule, which                   competition, including in instances
     was limited to the 2018 benefit year and                                                                      average premium in the HHS-operated
                                                             where certain state laws or regulations               risk adjustment methodology for the
     did not propose any changes to the                      differentially affect smaller or newer
     process established in § 153.320(d).                                                                          2014–2018 benefit years. This final rule
                                                             issuers. In addition, as detailed above,              adopts the HHS-operated risk
     However, we will continue to consider                   beginning with the 2020 benefit year,
     commenter feedback on the process,                                                                            adjustment methodology for the 2018
                                                               29 See 83 FR 16955. Also see 81 FR 29146 at
                                                                                                                   benefit year, maintaining the use of
       26 See section 1321(c) of the PPACA.                  29152 (May 11, 2016), available at https://
                                                                                                                   statewide average premium as the cost-
       27 See 83 FR 16955.
                                                             www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2016-05-11/pdf/2016-         scaling factor in the HHS-operated risk
       28 See § 153.320(d) and 83 FR 16960.                  11017.pdf.                                            adjustment methodology and the


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     63428            Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 236 / Monday, December 10, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

     continued operation of the program in a                 estimated under the HHS-operated risk                 Region (PIR), 1845 Wasp Blvd., Bldg.
     budget-neutral manner, to protect                       adjustment methodology established in                 176, Honolulu, HI 96818.
     consumers from the effects of adverse                   those final rules. The approximate                      The Fishery Ecosystem Plan for
     selection and premium increases that                    estimated risk adjustment transfers for               Pelagic Fisheries of the Western Pacific
     would result from issuer uncertainty.                   the 2018 benefit year are $4.8 billion. As            (Pelagic FEP) is available from the
     The Premium Stabilization Rule,                         such, we also incorporate into this final
                                                                                                                   Western Pacific Fishery Management
     previous Payment Notices, and other                     rule the RIA in the 2018 Payment Notice
     rulemakings noted above provided                                                                              Council (Council), 1164 Bishop St.,
                                                             proposed and final rules.30 This final
     detail on the implementation of the risk                rule is not subject to the requirements               Suite 1400, Honolulu, HI 96813, tel
     adjustment program, including the                       of Executive Order 13771 (82 FR 9339,                 808–522–8220, fax 808–522–8226, or
     specific parameters applicable for the                  February 3, 2017) because it is expected              http://www.wpcouncil.org.
     2018 benefit year.                                      to result in no more than de minimis                  FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
     B. Overall Impact                                       costs.                                                Rebecca Walker, NMFS PIRO
        We have examined the impact of this                    Dated: November 16, 2018.                           Sustainable Fisheries, 808–725–5184.
     rule as required by Executive Order                     Seema Verma,                                          SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:      In a final
     12866 on Regulatory Planning and                        Administrator, Centers for Medicare &                 rule published on October 23, 2018,
     Review (September 30, 1993), Executive                  Medicaid Services.
                                                                                                                   NMFS specified a 2018 limit of 2,000 t
     Order 13563 on Improving Regulation                       Dated: November 19, 2018.                           of longline-caught bigeye tuna for the
     and Regulatory Review (January 18,                      Alex M. Azar II,                                      U.S. Pacific Island territories of
     2011), the Regulatory Flexibility Act                   Secretary, Department of Health and Human             American Samoa, Guam, and the CNMI
     (RFA) (September 19, 1980, Pub. L. 96–                  Services.
                                                                                                                   (83 FR 53399). NMFS allows each
     354), section 1102(b) of the Social                     [FR Doc. 2018–26591 Filed 12–7–18; 8:45 am]           territory to allocate up to 1,000 t of the
     Security Act, section 202 of the                        BILLING CODE 4120–01–P                                2,000 t limit to U.S. longline fishing
     Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
                                                                                                                   vessels identified in a valid specified
     (March 22, 1995; Pub. L. 104–4),
     Executive Order 13132 on Federalism                                                                           fishing agreement.
                                                             DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE                                   On November 19, 2018, NMFS
     (August 4, 1999), the Congressional
     Review Act (5 U.S.C. 804(2)), and                       National Oceanic and Atmospheric                      received from the Council a specified
     Executive Order 13771 on Reducing                       Administration                                        fishing agreement between the
     Regulation and Controlling Regulatory                                                                         government of American Samoa and
     Costs. Executive Orders 12866 and                       50 CFR Part 665                                       Quota Management, Inc. (QMI). The
     13563 direct agencies to assess all costs                                                                     Council’s Executive Director advised
     and benefits of available regulatory                    RIN 0648–XG025                                        that the specified fishing agreement was
     alternatives and, if regulation is                                                                            consistent with the criteria set forth in
     necessary, to select regulatory                         Pacific Island Pelagic Fisheries; 2018
                                                             U.S. Territorial Longline Bigeye Tuna                 50 CFR 665.819(c)(1). NMFS reviewed
     approaches that maximize net benefits                                                                         the agreement and determined that it is
     (including potential economic,                          Catch Limits for American Samoa
                                                                                                                   consistent with the Pelagic FEP, the
     environmental, public health and safety                 AGENCY:  National Marine Fisheries                    Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
     effects, distributive impacts, and                      Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and                  Conservation and Management Act,
     equity). A regulatory impact analysis                   Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
     (RIA) must be prepared for major rules                                                                        implementing regulations, and other
                                                             Commerce.                                             applicable laws.
     with economically significant effects
     ($100 million or more in any one year).                 ACTION: Announcement of a valid                          In accordance with 50 CFR 300.224(d)
        OMB has determined that this final                   specified fishing agreement.                          and 50 CFR 665.819(c)(9), vessels
     rule is ‘‘economically significant’’                                                                          identified in the agreement may retain
                                                             SUMMARY:   NMFS announces a valid
     within the meaning of section 3(f)(1) of                                                                      and land bigeye tuna in the western and
                                                             specified fishing agreement that
     Executive Order 12866, because it is                                                                          central Pacific Ocean under the
                                                             allocates up to 1,000 metric tons (t) of
     likely to have an annual effect of $100                                                                       American Samoa limit. NMFS will
                                                             the 2018 bigeye tuna limit for the
     million in any 1 year. In addition, for                                                                       begin attributing bigeye tuna caught by
                                                             Territory of American Samoa to
     the reasons noted above, OMB has                                                                              vessels identified in the agreement to
                                                             identified U.S. longline fishing vessels.
     determined that this final rule is a major                                                                    American Samoa starting on December
                                                             The agreement supports the long-term
     rule under the Congressional Review
                                                             sustainability of fishery resources of the            10, 2018. This is seven days before
     Act.
        This final rule offers further                       U.S. Pacific Islands, and fisheries                   December 17, 2018, which is the date
     explanation of budget neutrality and the                development in American Samoa.                        NMFS forecasted the fishery would
     use of statewide average premium in the                 DATES: December 7, 2018.                              reach the CNMI bigeye tuna allocation
     risk adjustment state payment transfer                  ADDRESSES: NMFS prepared                              limit. If NMFS determines that the
     formula when HHS is operating the                       environmental analyses that describe                  fishery will reach the American Samoa
     permanent risk adjustment program                       the potential impacts on the human                    1,000-t attribution, we would restrict the
     established by section 1343 of the                      environment that would result from the                retention of bigeye tuna caught by
     PPACA on behalf of a state for the 2018                 action. The analyses, identified by                   vessels identified in the agreement,
     benefit year. We note that we previously                NOAA–NMFS–2018–0026, are available                    unless the vessels are included in a
     estimated transfers associated with the                 from https://www.regulations.gov/                     subsequent specified fishing agreement
     risk adjustment program in the Premium                  docket?D=NOAA-NMFS-2018-0026, or                      with another U.S. territory, and we
     Stabilization Rule and the 2018                         from Michael D. Tosatto, Regional                     would publish a notice to that effect in
     Payment Notice, and that the provisions                 Administrator, NMFS Pacific Islands                   the Federal Register.
     of this final rule do not change the risk                                                                       Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
     adjustment transfers previously                           30 81   FR 61455 and 81 FR 94058.



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Document Created: 2018-12-08 00:22:42
Document Modified: 2018-12-08 00:22:42
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionRules and Regulations
ActionFinal rule.
DatesThe provisions of this final rule are effective on February 8, 2019.
ContactAbigail Walker, (410) 786-1725; Adam Shaw, (410) 786-1091; Jaya Ghildiyal, (301) 492-5149; or Adrianne Patterson, (410) 786-0686.
FR Citation83 FR 63419 
RIN Number0938-AT66

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