āIf you like your private plan, you can keep it.ā
ā a statement made in a video ad released by the Pete Buttigieg for President campaign on Feb. 21, in advance of the South Carolina primary.

As the Democratic presidential campaign moves to the battleground of South Carolina this weekend, candidate Pete Buttigieg, the former mayor of South Bend, Indiana, is highlighting his health plan as he seeks to slow the momentum of the front-runner, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders.
In a https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r3JX-SbgvSU
target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer"> video ad
airing across the state, Buttigieg argues that his health plan ā called āMedicare for All Who Want Itā ā offers Americans their choice of insurance plans, in a way he says Sandersā more sweeping āMedicare for Allā plan does not.
The Sanders plan would eliminate private insurance and move everyone into a government-run program.
Under Buttigiegās proposal, the ad says, āEveryone gets access to Medicare, if they choose.ā Specifically, according to campaign documents, people or employers could buy into a government-provided health plan, which the campaign says would provide an āaffordable, comprehensive alternativeā to what is sold on the private market.
But, the voiceover adds, āif you like your private plan, you can keep it.ā
This isnāt the first time a politician has made such a promise. Arguing in favor of the Affordable Care Act, then-President Barack Obama repeatedly said the health law would let people keep their private health plans, if they liked them.
That didnāt pan out: of Americansā plans were canceled, spawning months of controversy. In 2013, PolitiFact rated Obamaās statement the
With that context, we decided to look deeper at Buttigiegās remark. We reached out to his campaign but never heard back.
An Uncertain Market
Experts we talked to said the former mayorās remark is remarkably similar to Obamaās ā right down to the pitfalls it encounters.
Those policy analysts said Buttigieg is trying to differentiate his plan from Sandersā sweeping proposal, arguing his offering is more moderate than Sandersā and preserves choice. He suggests many Americans would be able to pick between buying private insurance or opting into the government plan.
But does that mean that if you like your plan, you can keep it? As the Obama White House learned, not necessarily.
āItās like dĆ©jĆ vu all over again,ā said Sabrina Corlette, a research professor at Georgetown Universityās Center on Health Insurance Reforms.
The problem is that private insurance availability isnāt up to the government. To be sure, state and federal regulators have the power to dictate, for example, the inclusion of certain benefits and to set basic consumer protections. But the government cannot specifically require insurance companies to offer plans, and any carrier has the option to stop providing coverage.
Already, market forces dictate what health insurance is available from year to year. For example, negotiations between an insurer and physicians could mean that an insurer drops doctors from its network. Changing profit margins could drive a private carrier to exit a certain market. An employer looking to trim expenses might decide to change health insurers, changing coverage offerings for employees.
Buttigiegās health plan ā which would more generously subsidize people buying private insurance than the ACA does and create a public health insurance option that individuals and employers could buy ā wouldnāt change any of those economic scenarios.
āWhen you have private plans offered and sold by private companies, those private companies are going to make business decisions that might affect your coverage,ā Corlette said. āThey can opt to get out of the business.ā
Thatās been especially clear in the ACA individual marketplace. In many counties, only one private insurer sells coverage on the marketplace. Itās impossible to predict, but a competing public option might change the financial incentives for those plans and push some of those carriers to abandon the exchange. If that happened, people using that plan would lose the insurance they have, regardless of how they feel about it.
Put more forcefully, āThereās no way the government can guarantee a private plan will continue, without mandating it will,ā said Cynthia Cox, a vice president at the Kaiser Family Foundation.
So, she added, suggesting that people who like their private plans will have the option to keep them under Buttigiegās proposal is āprobably not true.ā (KHN is an editorially independent program of the foundation.)
The Employer Question
This is especially the case when it comes to the nearly 160 million people who get their insurance from an employer.
Already, that group experiences volatility when it comes to their health insurance. In 2019, 53% of employers providing coverage considered changing the plan or the carrier they offered, according to. Of that group, almost a fifth ā 18% ā ultimately did change insurance carriers.
That flux would likely increase under a plan like Buttigiegās. Already, many employers (particularly smaller ones) indicate frustration with providing a health benefit that is increasingly complex and expensive. If a public option were cheaper, more might shift employees into that pool, dropping private insurance.
āEven if you donāt want the public option, your employer might decide that they do,ā Cox said.
How big the change would be is difficult to gauge. It depends, for instance, on how generous the public option is, how much it costs employers and whether current private insurance trends continue.
Still, āany change you make to the health care environment would cause changes to reverberate throughout the system,ā said Sherry Glied, a health economist and dean of New York Universityās Wagner School of Public Service. āAny government action will cause change to happen more than they would otherwise.ā
Itās worth noting that many people may not be affected. Under the ACA, for instance, 4 million lost their plans, or fewer than 2% of all people who had coverage.
Most people who move from private insurance to the public option would likely have better benefits, said Benjamin Sommers, a health economist at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. But, some would be unhappy to lose the existing, private coverage that they know.
āThe more accurate soundbite would be most people with private insurance would be able to keep it,ā he added. āThat would beg the question of who isnāt included there ā and the answer is, we donāt know.ā
And, in contrast with Sandersā Medicare for All single-payer proposal, Buttigiegās plan would preserve much of the current private insurance. But Buttigieg suggests that Medicare for All Who Want It ā if administered well ā could function as a āā to a Medicare for All world, eventually bringing everyone into the public system.
āThereās good reason to think some of the private insurance competition wonāt fare well against āMedicare for All Who Want It,ā ā Sommers said. āYou might see some of the private plans dropping out. And that may be a sign the policy is working.ā
Our Ruling
In a new campaign ad, Buttigieg claims that under his proposal to overhaul the health care system, āif you like your private plan, you can keep it.ā
This may be true for some Americans who have private coverage, but it is not true for all. It ignores the inherent instability of the private insurance markets ā in which plans are canceled or changed all the time, people often donāt get to pick which private plan is even available to them, and government intervention would likely exacerbate that volatility.
Introducing a public option, as Buttigieg intends to do, could create more incentives for employers to drop private coverage and switch to the public Medicare plan ā and, in some cases, for private carriers to exit the individual marketplace. The fact that it would be less disruptive than Medicare for All doesnāt change this.
Buttigiegās claim has some truth to it, but leaves out key facts and context. We rate it Mostly False.
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