For Immediate Release
Office of the Press Secretary
January 22, 2007
Press Briefing on the President's State of the Union Health Care Initiative
White House Conference Center
In Focus: Health Care
State of the Union 2007
PARTICIPANTS
Julie Goon, Special Assistant to the President for Economic Policy Katherine Baicker, Council of Economic Advisors
3:59 P.M. EST
MR. FRATTO: Good afternoon. Thanks for coming on relatively short
notice. We wanted to give you all an opportunity to dig in a little bit
to the health proposals that President Bush alluded to in his radio
address this weekend, and make sure that you have an opportunity to talk
to some of our policy experts and to get a little bit deeper into it so
that we're all on the same page.
We're excited about the proposals the President put forth and will put
forth tomorrow night in his State of the Union address. We've asked
Julie Goon, who is with the National Economic Council and a health care
policy expert, and Kate Baicker is a member of the Council of Economic
Advisors, to give a fuller briefing on both -- we're going to talk about
both proposals. I'm going to ask Julie to come up first to frame up the
issue in the context of President Bush's -- the way he views health care
and health care reform. And then we'll ask Kate to get in a little bit
more deeply on the tax proposal and how that will affect health care and
health care reform.
So, Julie, do you want to come up and lead us off?
MS. GOON: Thanks, Tony, and thanks to all of you who are here today.
I think I just want to start out by saying the President has had a whole
series of health policies that continue to remain the foundation of the
things that we are doing in the health care area, including the work
that is going on with respect to transparency and getting more
information available to consumers; the work with respect to health
information technology and health savings accounts, trying to make
insurance more portable across state lines, et cetera.
But in looking at the coming year and recognizing that this is the year
that the state Children's Health Insurance Program is up for
reauthorization, that this is a good year to really refocus and
re-target on a lot of the ideas that people have had about how to
provide for more insurance coverage for people who don't have access to
that coverage right now.
The President felt that it was important that we ensure that affordable
coverage is available in the states, that is why an important piece of
what he's going to be talking about tomorrow has to do with the
Affordable Choices Initiative that will help states who make basic
private affordable health insurance available in their states, provide
additional help to those states to help subsidize insurance coverage for
people who are poor and who are uninsurable at this point.
And I think Secretary Leavitt has been very instrumental in pulling this
initiative together. He's been talking to a lot of governors who have
come forward with their own ideas. We'll be doing more of that over the
next several weeks, and the President will be talking about that, as
well, in the State of the Union. And it's part of the fact sheet on
health care that came out today.
Complementary to that is the need to address some of the biases in the
tax system and reform the tax code to realign those incentives to
provide for more of a reason for people to purchase health insurance
coverage. As many of you know, right now you have a tax benefit for the
purchase of health insurance coverage if you purchase it within the
employment setting. If you have to buy health insurance in the
non-group setting you do not get that same kind of tax advantage.
And so the tax reform proposal that the President will put forward in
the State of the Union levels the playing field between insurance
coverage purchased inside the employer market and outside the employer
market, and does it in a fairly innovative and creative way, in a way I
think that we haven't seen before, and Kate will be able to talk in more
specific detail about that. But, essentially, it puts in place a
standard uniform deduction for the purchase of health insurance
coverage. So if you purchase coverage, you get this deduction, and it's
the same for everybody.
This is an immediate benefit to people who don't have insurance now who
have wanted to purchase it but haven't been able to do so because of the
cost of health insurance coverage and because they don't get this tax
benefit. It's an immediate benefit to people who have purchased
coverage in the non-group market already, and it helps a majority --
millions of Americans who currently have insurance coverage through
their employer -- will get additional tax benefit as a result of this
change in policy.
There have been a lot of people who have been concerned that doing
something like this doesn't necessarily improve the market for health
insurance, and I would just like to point to our experience over the
last couple of years in the Medicare Part D program. As many of you
remember, when that debate started, folks didn't think there would be
people who would be interested in offering prescription drug coverage in
the Medicare program. A number of companies came forward to do so.
Initially the actuaries estimated that the cost of that coverage would
be fairly high, and would grow. And as all of you know, when seniors
and other beneficiaries got a look at the choices that were available to
them, what was in those benefit packages and what the costs were, as a
result of their choices, we have a very competitive market in Medicare
Part D, and the average premium is down 40 percent from what it was
anticipated to be when that program first started.
So getting back to the specifics on the tax piece, why don't I turn it
over to Kate, and then we're both available to answer more questions on
this. Thank you.
MS. BAICKER: Thanks. So Julie did a great job laying out the big
landscape of what we'd like to do, and then I'm going to be the geek and
try to explain how it actually works. So any clarifying questions would
be most welcome.
As you know, right now when you get insurance through your employer,
that insurance isn't subject to taxation, so it's part of your
compensation that you're getting income and payroll tax-free. And that
means that people have a really strong incentive to get more generous
employer policies to cover all the health care they might want to
consume because if you go out into the health care marketplace to buy a
doctor's office visit, you're usually paying for that with after-tax
dollars. But if you get that covered by your employer-provided plan,
it's covered with pre-tax dollars, and that's a big discount. And
that's a lot of the reason why we see such generous first-dollar
coverage in the employer market as the norm, unlike other industries,
like auto insurance or home owner's insurance.
So what this proposal would do is change the system to level the playing
field in two ways. It will level the playing field for people who are
buying insurance on their own, relative to those who are getting it in
the employer market, or through their jobs. And it will level the
playing field for people who want to get basic policies with lower
premiums, and then pay for routine care out of pocket relative to people
who want to get more generous, deluxe, gold-plated plans. Right now the
most generous tax benefits are reserved for people with the most
generous employer-provided health insurance.
What this plan would do is give a flat, standard deduction for anybody
who purchases any kind of health insurance, no matter how much the
health insurance costs and no matter where they get it. It would be
$15,000 for people purchasing family policy, $7,500 for people
purchasing single policies. So if your employer is giving you insurance
through your job, you get the standard deduction. If you go buy health
insurance on your own, you get the standard deduction. If your policy
costs $5,000, you still get $15,000 of compensation tax-free. If your
policy costs $20,000, you still get $15,000 of compensation tax-free,
using the family example.
So who does this help, who does this hurt, what's the total cost? It's
revenue-neutral over the whole health care system and over the 10-year
budget window. Anybody who doesn't have insurance right now has a
really strong incentive to go get insurance. Right now an insurance
policy on the individual market or the non-group market, if you're just
going to get your own family policy, the average cost of one of those
policies right now is about $5,200.
Take a family earning $60,000 in the 15-percent income tax bracket,
15-percent payroll tax bracket, if they are currently uninsured and they
go buy insurance, under the current system it costs them $5,200 today.
Under this system in 2009, once it phases in, they get $15,000 of
compensation tax-free. They're paying 30 percent marginal tax rate on
that, so that's $4,500. That's a huge chunk of the cost of an insurance
policy out there. So it makes insurance much more affordable for those
people.
So anybody who is uninsured right now is a big winner under the
proposal. So are people who are buying insurance on their own. If
you're out there and you've already purchased your own non-group
insurance or your own insurance not through your job, for the most part
you're getting no tax benefit. So this is a pure win for you. Your tax
bill goes down.
Now, what about people getting insurance through their jobs right now?
Anybody getting a policy under the standard deduction, a family policy
of less than $15,000, or an individual policy of less than $7,500 would
immediately see a lower tax bill. That's because they would get a
standard $15,000 deduction for a family, but then they would have to
count as taxable income their insurance policy, but it would be lower
than the $15,000, so their tax bill would go down.
That's 80 percent of the policies offered in the employer market. So as
of January 1, 2009, when this policy gets implemented, we hope, if you
look at all the policies offered in the employer market, 80 percent of
them would be under that standard deduction. So those policies would be
subject to lower taxes.
Twenty percent of the policies, the ones that are left, are actually
higher than the standard deduction. And that means that if people
didn't change their behavior at all, their tax bills would go up because
they would be taxed on the extra amount above the standard deduction.
So if your policy for your family costs $20,000, you get the standard
$15,000 deduction -- that leaves $5,000 extra taxable income that you'd
have to pay income and payroll taxes on that you don't now. So those 20
percent of people might see their tax bills go up. On the other hand,
they have some time between now and then to change their compensation
packages.
One of the things that we think is inefficient about the way our tax
system treats health care is the strong subsidy for more generous
employer-provided policies relative to everybody else -- people buying
insurance on their own or people getting less-generous policies. This
would give people a chance as they're negotiating contracts with their
employers to take more of their compensation in the form of wages and
less in the form of health benefits. So that 20 percent has some
recourse between now and then.
The other way that helps keep the whole package revenue neutral is that
the $15,000 or $7,500 would be indexed to CPI, not general health care
costs, and one of the goals of this policy is really to rationalize our
health care spending so that we're getting higher-value, more efficient
care, and we hope in the long run that that substantially brings down
the trajectory of growth in national health spending overall, because
people will be purchasing higher-value plans, they'll be allocating
their health care dollars more efficiently. We think that will bring
down national health spending both immediately, as people change the
quantity of health insurance versus wages that they take in their
compensation packages, and even more in the long run, as there's an
incentive to develop a more rational, efficient health care system, more
cost-effective technology, more provider competition.
So that's the bare bones, but I bet that there are questions.
Q When you talk about the cost of your insurance policy being $15,000
or $7,500, are you just counting the employer side or is it the employee
and employer side?
MS. BAICKER: So the deduction, the standard deduction has nothing to do
with how much your health insurance costs under this proposal. That's
the part that's hard to get your mind around because it's so different
from how it works right now.
So if you -- no matter how much your health insurance costs, no matter
how much is spent on your health insurance by you and your employer, you
get a $15,000 deduction for your family. Now is that a win or a loss
for you? It depends on how much you were spending before, and really it
depends on how much you were spending with pre-tax dollars before. Now,
for everybody the employer portion is pre-tax. For most people in big
firms, the employee contribution is pre-tax, too, because you're doing
it through a cafeteria plan or an FFA. For some people, their employee
share towards their employer premium was already being taxed.
So when we think about the tax benefit that you get because of the
standard deduction, that doesn't depend at all on how much your health
insurance policy costs. But when you think about how much that is
relative to what you're paying now, you want to think about how much of
your premium now is getting paid with pre-tax dollars. For most people,
that's the employer plus the employee share. For some people, it's just
the employer share.
Q If I want to know if I'm over the threshold and I'm going to be
taxed, I add what I'm throwing in, plus what my employer is throwing in?
MS. BAICKER: So let me put it another way, your taxable income, if this
policy is implemented, will be your wages and anything your employer is
paying for health insurance. You're already paying your share out of
your wages, so your total taxable income is the check that you get, plus
whatever your employer has paid directly to the health insurance
company. You may have to give back some of your check for the health
insurance. And then you get to take off of that $15,000. And so for 80
percent of policies that $15,000 is more than what was getting pitched
in. But for some people, it might be less.
Q The figure I saw was that in '05, most employer-provided health
policies were running $11,000-plus.
MS. BAICKER: I believe today in '07, the average employer policy is
$11,500 --
MS. GOON: For a family.
MS. BAICKER: For a family, or I think the average family policy
overall, so it incorporates the mix of the number of people in the
family. Then the policy gets implemented -- this proposal will be
implemented in 2009 -- the $11,500 average today, if you were to inflate
that up to 2009 so that you could compare it to the $15,000 would be
more like $13,600. And that's the number that we used to figure out the
80 percent-20 percent breakdown.
Q But you're saying -- since we're dealing here with marginal tax
rates based on a $15,000 deduction.
MS. BAICKER: All the calculations were done in 2009 dollars.
Q The assumption then is that a family of four is going to be able to
find a $5,000 health plan and not the $13,600 --
MS. BAICKER: No, there's no assumption like that -- no, no, no.
Q I'm sorry, I misunderstood then. I thought you said that --
MS. BAICKER: I gave some examples, and I hope that those weren't taken
as the general rule, so let me --
Q A $15,000 tax deduction, assuming a 30-percent tax bracket, gives
you $4,500 to pay for your health plan.
MS. BAICKER: Exactly. Right, and so then I gave as a benchmark for you
a comparison for what the average individual market policy costs. But
that doesn't mean everybody would find it for that. I was just trying
to give you a sense of how far that would go for a family that's on
their own. So one of the groups that we're concerned about, the
uninsured; we're concerned about families who are going out on their own
to buy health insurance; and then we're concerned about people getting
insurance from their employer, and I tried to give you some statistics
for each group.
Q Let me ask one other question if I can. It seems like there are
some people at the bottom end of the scale who make too much to qualify
for Medicaid and not enough to benefit from the tax deduction. How
large a group is that?
MS. BAICKER: That's why the two proposals that Julie talked about
dovetail so nicely, and I'll turn back to her in a second. But I'll
remind you that it's income and payroll taxes. So some of the -- think
about families who are earning too little to pay income taxes, too much
or with the wrong family structure to be on a public program. They're
still getting the payroll tax benefit, which is substantial.
Q Social Security and Medicare?
MS. BAICKER: Right, and that's 15 percent, so they're still getting 15
percent of $15,000 or 15 percent of $7,500 for an individual, even if
they have no income tax liability. That said, there are going to be
some groups for whom that's not enough to get them a health insurance
policy because somebody is sick, because they're very low income. And
for those groups, the Affordable Choices Initiative is there to help
fill in the gaps.
MS. GOON: And as Kate said, that's why these two policies are so
complementary. A lot of states have been looking at their options to
try and use the flexibility that was given to them in the Deficit
Reduction Act, to do waivers in their Medicaid programs, to look at
subsidizing coverage beyond the Medicaid eligibility groups, et cetera.
And the Affordable Choices Initiative is a way that we want to help
states who want to make insurance affordable for their citizens by
ensuring that we are providing additional federal help towards that end
as long as the state is committed to making basic affordable health
insurance available in that state.
Q I have a question on the phase-in period. What do you have in
mind? I presume the deductions would be lower in the earlier year?
MS. BAICKER: The deductions would start at $15,000 for a family, $7,500
for an individual in '09, when it took effect, and then they would be
indexed to CPI, so they would grow gradually over time.
Q So you're assuming it starts in 2009, I'm sorry, I misunderstood.
And also --
MR. FRATTO: That's the phase in. There's no, sort of --
MS. BAICKER: There is nothing until 2009, and then it's here.
Q And then the other question, is this perhaps an indirect way of
trying to encourage more health savings accounts, since it seems like a
lot of people's encouragement here is to buy high-deductible standard
policies, which often can be paired with HSAs?
MS. BAICKER: Certainly HSAs are a great step in this direction, and
this is an even bigger step towards leveling the playing field and
removing some of the weird disincentives to getting basic insurance and
paying for routine care out of pocket. What this really does is give
people the flexibility to structure plans that work best for them.
So you can think about -- you could get a lower premium by having a
higher deductible, by having a smaller panel of physicians covered, by
having more cost sharing throughout the distribution of spending, by all
sorts of different ways. And those policies would be on equal footing
if you got them in the group market or the non-group market. So it
really frees up a lot of parameters for people. That said, HSAs are a
great thing and remain in the tax code.
Q One other question. For those that are uninsured now, it's
arguable that some of them, because they don't have insurance, or have
preexisting conditions that might be rejected, or they might have to pay
quite a bit more for a standard policy, and how does your plan address
--
MS. GOON: Well, this gets back, again, to the Affordable Choices
Initiative with the states, and working with the states to encourage
better funding of uninsurable risk pools, which many states have, some
states don't; but working with the states to really identify how best to
target additional subsidies to people who need insurance in that state.
In many cases, it will be people who have preexisting conditions, in
other cases it will be more of the poor.
Q How will this affect retirees who have supplemental coverage, A,
and when does it become revenue-neutral? Is it revenue neutral
immediately, or does that come with the indexing?
MS. BAICKER: So question one, it treats all people with private health
insurance the same way. So it doesn't matter where you're getting it --
if you're buying it on your own, if it's through a former employer or a
current employer, as long as you have at least catastrophic coverage or
better, then you get the standard deduction. So retirees are given the
same benefits from the tax code as everybody else. So it really levels
the playing field for them.
As for revenue-neutral, it's revenue-neutral over the 10-year window
together. So in the early years, it's a revenue loser, and in the later
years, it's a revenue winner.
Q When does it become a revenue winner?
MS. BAICKER: I don't have that in front of me. Roughly in the middle.
But I'll check. But there's a -- I think it's roughly in the middle,
but I'll have to check that for you.
Q Do you know what it's going to cost the first year?
MS. BAICKER: Again, I don't have that whole stream in front of me. We
can get that information for you. And that will be in the budget.
Q Is this in any way part of a long-term philosophy to wean people
off of employer-provided plans that have become so burdensome for
employers?
MS. BAICKER: This is part of a long-run philosophy to level the playing
field, and to really let people pick the mix of compensation that's best
for them. People like getting their insurance through their employer,
and they're going to continue getting their insurance through their
employer for a lot of people. Some people may go to the non-group
market once this playing field is more level for them, and they have
that option. And a lot of people who are not getting any insurance are
going to have options open to them that weren't open before. But it's
definitely part of a long-run philosophy to level the playing field and
let people change their compensation mix accordingly.
Q Does this administration believe that employer-provided care has
become overly burdensome for business?
MR. FRATTO: That's a decision for -- that's not a question for us.
What this reform does is remove inequities in the tax code, where you
have a certain part of America that receives a 100 percent benefit, and
another portion of our citizens that receives zero or near zero benefit
through the tax code. We think about it as tax reform that levels the
playing field and provides a basic, standard benefit to all Americans.
How it affects businesses -- there are dynamics there that will work out
between businesses and their employees. I could tell you businessmen
who -- business owners who are in the administration, people who --
people like Secretary Paulson and Al Hubbard and others who have run
businesses feel that their employees want employer-provided health
coverage and they want to provide it because it's their way of
attracting the best talent. And so there are incentives here that we
can't predict -- that's going to be decided between businesses and their
employees.
MS. BAICKER: And just one thing to add on. The health care system
overall, because of the inefficiencies that are built in, is a big
burden on all of us. It's a big burden on employees and employers and
taxpayers and the federal budget. And something needs to be done to
rein in health care spending because we're not getting value for our
dollars. So this proposal will be a big step in the direction of
getting more bang for the buck for our health care spending, because I
think nobody in the country can afford to keep spending more and more
and more money on a health care system that's broken.
Q This will be a tax hike for some people?
MS. BAICKER: This is revenue-neutral tax reform. There are always
going to be some winners and some losers, but the people who might
initially be losers have options.
Q Maybe this follows on her question, maybe I didn't quite get the
answer. Can you explain, how does this affect Medicare recipients, and
also people with Medicare but who buy supplemental policies? I just
didn't quite grasp the --
MS. GOON: If you buy supplemental policies right now, I don't think you
get any tax benefit from that, because you're doing it all in after-tax
dollars.
MS. BAICKER: This is for purchasers of private health insurance.
Q So, in other words, let's say you're a retiree, but you also have,
like -- you're buying AARP insurance --
MS. GOON: So I'm retiree on Medicare?
Q A retiree on Medicare, but you're also buying AARP. Do you get the
deduction, or not?
MS. GOON: I think we have to get back to you on that, but I don't think
this speaks to this supplemental insurance. It's traditional --
Q Primary health insurance?
MS. GOON: Yes, primary health insurance. And Medicare is taking care
of that for those beneficiaries.
Q I wonder -- I'm just doing some quick back-of-the-napkin math here
-- at what point does the average cost of a family plan cross over that
$15,000 barrier and the deduction there no longer is as effective as if
it were under the -- two or three years --
MS. BAICKER: At $15,000.
Q Yes, but how long does that take? Two or three years --
MS. BAICKER: Oh, the average policy get to $15,000? A few years after
2009. I can sort of do a back of the envelope, that if it goes from
$11,500 to $13,600 between now and 2009, then I'm going to say --
MS. GOON: I think we'd want to get back to you on that.
MS. BAICKER: Yes.
MR. FRATTO: Just to be clear, any projections on that are relatively
static projections, right?
MS. GOON: Right.
MS. BAICKER: Absolutely.
MS. GOON: They don't take into account changes in the health care
marketplace that we expect to occur as a result of this policy.
Q Do you think they'll ever cross that?
MS. GOON: I didn't say that.
Q How large do you expect that impact to be on the health care
marketplace, though?
MS. BAICKER: There are a number of channels through which this will
affect health care consumption. Immediately it will affect quantities
that people consume because they'll be changing their mix of
compensation and their choice of health care plan. It will affect
prices through provider competition. And then in the long run, it will
affect the development of more cost-effective health technology. And
that's your real bang for the buck.
Putting all of that together, our best guess is that within the
medium-term, you're talking about lowering health expenditures, a share
of GDP, by about half a percentage point, and that's a lot of money.
MR. FRATTO: And if there's any question as to whether the health care
delivery system, in terms of selling health policies, acts in any way
like a market today, ask yourselves right now -- and I won't ask for a
show of hands -- but if anyone here knows what the value of your policy
is, what you pay for health care. I'd say very few of you have any --
and I don't know, either. Very few of us have any idea of what our
health policies cost.
So that's compensation that we're receiving from our employees that we
have zero transparency on. It doesn't show up in your W2 form; you have
no idea of what that share of your compensation is.
And I'll ask a second question -- is when was the last time you were
sitting at home eating dinner with your family and received an annoying
phone call from a health insurer trying to market you a health care
plan? This just doesn't happen today because there isn't the market for
it. Insurance companies are not out there trying to sell you the best
policy at the best price.
Q But they are trying to sell employers? Clearly --
MR. FRATTO: That's right.
Q -- it's an aggressive market.
Q Do you want us to get annoying phone calls? (Laughter.)
MR. FRATTO: Exactly. (Laughter.)
Q I get them from you all the time, Terry. (Laughter.)
Q What is the cost of this over five years?
MS. BAICKER: I don't have the year-by-year breakdown. So it's
revenue-neutral over the 10-year window and it's a loser in the first
five years, and a winner in the second five years -- or at the beginning
and at the end, but I don't know exactly where the break-even point is.
Q What about for the next budget? I mean, what is the number that's
going to show up there?
MS. BAICKER: It does not affect the 2012 budget -- deficit. So that
maybe the tipping point --
Q -- deficit, is the question.
MS. BAICKER: I think it's a revenue loser in the short run, and a
revenue winner in the long run.
Q What is the figure that's going to --
MS. BAICKER: I'll have to get that for you. I don't have that number
in my head.
Q You're saying that this is going to be a boon or help 80 percent of
the people -- how much? What are your calculations about what that
means in terms of money coming back to people?
MS. BAICKER: I have -- well, I can tell you a couple of numbers which
are not exactly the number you want, unfortunately, but they're close.
The family who is purchasing insurance on their own, how much are they
going to get back on average? They're going to get back $3,650 on
average, roughly. So that's not the -- so their tax bill is going to go
down by $3,650 because of this policy. Because they're buying health
insurance on their own right now and they're not getting any tax
benefit. So that's one group.
Another group, people who are uninsured right now, but that we guess
would -- we project would go get insurance because of the policy,
they're going to get a tax benefit of around $3,350.
The last one that you wanted to know is what's the average benefit for
that 80 percent of employers, and I don't have that one. So I'll get
that one.
MR. FRATTO: Do you want to talk about the share in the quintiles --
MS. BAICKER: Yes. So here's another -- here's a statistic that also
speaks to that indirectly. If you look at the distribution across the
income distribution -- so how much of a tax benefit does the lowest
quintile get versus the highest quintile because of the policy? About
-- the top quintile, the top 20 percent of income has a slight tax
increase because of this. The other four quintiles, first, second,
third, fourth, have a tax decrease.
So it's budget neutral overall, but it makes the tax code slightly more
progressive than it was before, so it's a slight increase for people at
the high end of the income distribution, and a slight tax decrease for
everybody else.
Q What is the average tax increase then?
MS. BAICKER: I do not have the average tax increase handy, but the
percent increase for the top quintile is .1 percent, a tenth of a
percent. And then the -- for the top quintile. And then for the other
quintiles, it looks like it averages around negative .3 percent. But
we'll get you the dollar figure.
Q If we have 47 million uninsured Americans now, at the end of your
five-year window, if it starts in '09, what's the uninsured number then?
MS. BAICKER: So there are two pieces of this policy. From the tax
proposal we think upwards of 3 million or more newly insured people.
But then that's one piece. Then there is the Affordable Choices
Initiative.
MS. GOON: Yes, and I don't think that they've got complete estimates on
the number of uninsured. They think that will pick up. It depends on,
again, how these negotiations go with the states and what they expect to
do. But initial estimates were fairly significant, and we'll get that
to you.
Q Can you help me clarify the competition -- is the idea that people
will move out of their employer-offered plans --
MS. BAICKER: The idea is that right now people face a dulled incentive
to figure out what the highest value of care is, because the tax system
subsidizes only care that you get through an employer insurance plan and
not care that you purchase out-of-pocket. So it pushes you into a
first-dollar insurance coverage plan where you pay for even routine care
with a really low co-pay, which means you don't ask the doctor how much
it costs. It costs you $10.
I know -- has anyone ever tried to ask the doctor, how much does this
visit cost? They can't even tell you, they don't know. So this would
add forces of competition and people evaluating which providers are the
highest value providers, which insurance plan is the highest value plan
for me, because it's no longer subsidized relative to wages. And that
also works really well with the President's information executive order,
getting better information about prices, about quality, about different
providers, cost-effectiveness. You need that information to help people
make better decisions and to get higher value out of the system.
MR. FRATTO: Let me -- because this question came up a couple times --
let's just be very clear on that point also. The shortest answer is,
no. Are you asking, is there a bias in the administration towards
trying to get people off of employer-provided health care? Flat-out no.
In no way. What we have are people receiving employer-provided benefits
that are subsidized through the tax code, and those on the other side of
the room here who are receiving no benefits. And the effort is to try
to provide a standard equitable share of the benefit.
Q But would it be fair to say there is a bias toward encouraging
employees to buy a high deductible, lower premium policy?
MS. BAICKER: There's a bias now against that, that we're trying to
remove. We're trying to level the playing field.
MS. GOON: And as Kate had indicated, there may be lower cost plans that
rely on other techniques -- smaller panels of doctors, more utilization
review. It provides a bias towards people looking at the cost of their
coverage and trying to determine if what they've got is really what they
need for their situation.
Q Can you say how much revenue this raises from the 20 percent who
would --
MS. BAICKER: That, again, I don't have with me except to say that it's
revenue-neutral. So that is exactly equal to the revenue given out to
everybody else once you have the indexing. I don't have that handy.
MR. FRATTO: You're asking for a year-by-year breakdown. And we'll work
with our friends at Treasury. I know that they're going to do some work
on this also, and we'll see at some point over the next couple days if
we can have it. But as Julie mentioned, this will show up in the
budget.
Q Is there a tax impact, then, on employers?
MS. BAICKER: No, so that's a good clarifying question. There's some
confusion over that, so let me try to explain it as best I can. And
then you can ask again and then I can try again. Right now employers
don't pay taxes on the wages that they pay their employees, or the
health insurance benefits. Those are all cost of business. They're not
taxed. That remains the same. So nothing changes there.
What changes is that the health insurance premiums that they pay on your
behalf becomes taxable income to you just like any other form of wages,
so it's treated just like --
Q There's a tax break basically. There's a tax break for the
employer, and you're doing a tax break for the individual. So it's a
double tax break.
MS. GOON: The tax break for the employer remains the same.
MS. BAICKER: So as far as the employer is concerned, everything is the
same except they now treat this premium that they were paying for you
just like they treat the wages that they paid you. So it shows up on
your W2. It's FICA -- payroll taxes are due on it and income taxes are
due on it. But you get to take the first $15,000 of your compensation
-- if you have a family plan -- tax-free. So for 80 percent of the
policies offered by employers, that's going to be -- that $15,000 is
going to be more generous than the add-on of the premium that you're
getting paid.
Q Do you have a projection for the average savings from someone
buying insurance on their own? Did you mention a projection for the
person whose employer is now providing insurance?
MS. BAICKER: That was the question that was asked that I could not
answer, so I'm going to get a number for you, and have to get back to
you.
Q Can I just clarify -- you're saying 3 million out of the 47 million
will be benefited under this tax change?
MS. BAICKER: That will be the net increase in the number of insured
people just from the tax piece alone, then layered on top of the
affordable choices initiative.
Q And why is that uninsured number so intractable in response to
changes in the tax code?
MS. BAICKER: Some of the people are not earning any money, some of the
people are sick, some of the people are choosing not to take up
insurance. So because it's a very heterogeneous group of people who are
uninsured, it's hard to find one magic bullet. It takes a system of
policies to address their diverse needs, and they have different needs
in different states. And that's part of the reason to rely on state
initiatives to address the specific needs of that uninsured group. So
this picks up a lot of people, but you really need some targeted
programs.
Q Can you explain again how this becomes revenue-neutral? What
happens in that five years?
MR. FRATTO: Ten years.
MS. BAICKER: The main thing that changes is that the $15,000 or $7,500
initial exclusion is indexed by inflation, not by projected health
costs. So if people did not change their behavior at all, the exclusion
would be going up like this, and premiums would be going up like this.
And so more people would be finding their premiums higher than the
$15,000 over time if they didn't change their behavior.
So that's -- the baseline, when you decide whether something is
revenue-neutral or not, you're comparing it to the status quo. And in
the status quo, health care costs are rising, rising, rising, whereas in
this system the exclusion grows at a lower rate, grows at CPI --
inflation -- and we think people will change their behavior, although
that -- to the extent they change their behavior it just looks even
better than that. But because the $15,000 exclusion grows more slowly
than health expenses would if we didn't do anything, in the beginning
you spend a little bit more money and in the end you get a little bit
more money back.
MR. FRATTO: There's also a market impact here that we think will have
an affect on the future pricing of health care policies, and that's the
fact that the benefit is where it is; that you have a benefit that is --
you have a $7,500 standard deduction for individuals, $15,000 for
families. There is an incentive for those marketing health insurance to
get within that number and to trend towards CPI, because that's what --
the people they're marketing it to, whether they're getting it through
their employers or buying it on their own, will want to have the full
benefit. And so they're going to try to market plans that fit within
the benefit.
MS. GOON: And again, you can look at the Part D experience, and that's
exactly what happened in the second year of bids in Part D, is that
people who were at the high end of those policies brought down their
premiums.
Q That just makes the whole program more expensive, right? I mean,
it's the 20 percent who are over 15 come under whatever the standard is,
and it can get more expensive.
MS. BAICKER: Because your tax benefit is flat, and so your tax benefit
is the $15,000 exclusion for the families, $7,500 for individuals. We
don't expect that people are taking compensation cuts because of this;
they're changing their mix of compensation between wages and health
insurance. But under this system, wages and health insurance are both
taxable. So people may -- we expect that health spending will go down,
because people will say, wait a minute, now that you're not subsidizing
my health insurance relative to my other wages, I'd like my next raise
to come in the form of cash, not in the form of more expensive health
benefits. But both of those would be taxable under this system.
So that mix of compensation will no longer affect tax revenues and will
no longer affect an individuals' well being, and that's the great thing
about it, is that people will no longer distort their compensation
towards health insurance, because we're pushing them towards it. We
won't be doing that anymore.
Q I'm wondering, if the idea is to have insurers target their plans
to the $7,500 and $15,000, isn't the other incentive there for them to
increase co-pays or to lower the benefits they're providing in order to
meet that mark, just as much as it is to improve the efficiency and
delivery?
MS. BAICKER: So this is a good question, because it highlights again
the incentive properties of this proposal. Now there's an incentive for
insurers to put together more generous packages, because we're
subsidizing health insurance relative to everything else. Once we stop
subsidizing health insurance relative to anything else, there's no need
to -- there's no reason they'd anchor on the $15,000 or the $7,500, they
would put together plans that were cheaper and cheaper and cheaper until
people found a plan that they really liked.
So there's no tax reason to stick at $15,000 any more than there is at
$10,000 or $5,000. It's all the same. There's no marginal subsidy of
health insurance relative to anything else, there's just a strong
incentive to get any health insurance package, but then there's no
incentive to pick one over the other. So what we expect is for insurers
to put together packages that best suit the needs of the people
enrolling in them.
So for you, you might like a really high deductible, and then no
co-pays. And you might like 10-percent cost sharing up to $20,000. And
you might like first-dollar coverage for everything because you hate
writing the checks. You all have different preferences and needs, and
the insurers wouldn't be pushed in one direction or the other. So we'd
expect to see insurers competing on value of the package, and they have
a lot of tools that they can access to put together a package that's
highest value for you.
MR. FRATTO: At the best price.
MS. BAICKER: At the best price.
Q I had a couple questions. So the President is going to acknowledge
that he would be raising the taxes on 20 percent of the public, do you
know how many people that is?
MS. BAICKER: That's not quite right.
Q Okay, okay. And then the second question is, wouldn't this be
encouraging people to get -- both the people, the 20 percent to get less
quality health care than they're getting now so that they're not paying
extra taxes? And overall, wouldn't that be true on everybody because
everybody would be saying, well, if I get the very least health care I
possibly can get, then I can get more cash in terms of my taxes,
therefore, and aren't you sort of doing a race to the bottom in terms of
how much coverage people would be getting?
MS. BAICKER: So let me first correct a small factual thing and then
answer the bigger question overall. So the 20 percent is -- let me put
the 20 percent in context again. Twenty percent of employer policies
offered now are above that standard deduction. So it's not 20 percent
of people, everybody in the whole country. It's 20 percent of employer
policies, so --
Q Do you know how many people that is?
MS. BAICKER: That is about, ballpark, 30 million.
Q So 30 million people in this country, their taxes would go up?
MS. BAICKER: If they didn't change their behavior. But people will
have time to think about what mix of compensation they want. And this
goes to your second question about race to the bottom, which is right
now, we've rigged it so there's a race to the top. We've said we're
subsidizing you more if you get a more generous employer-provided
insurance relative to anything else you could consume. So people have
been pushed in that direction.
When you remove that push, people are going to pick what they like best.
If you ask people, would you like the absolute cheapest health insurance
policy you can find? I bet most people will say, no, I want a high
value policy that gives me the mix of financial protection that I want,
and I'm going to trade off what my family wants to do with that money:
Do I want to put it towards health insurance? Do I want to put it
towards other family priorities? And you expect insurers to compete to
give people the best plan at the lowest price for what those people
want. And I don't think people want the minimum insurance. I think
people want good insurance at a reasonable price, and right now we're
just pushing them up towards first-dollar coverage plans. And when you
remove that push, they're going to choose what works out best for them.
MS. GOON: And there's an assumption, too, that the most generous policy
is the highest quality. And I don't think that that's ever been borne
out.
Q But you are saying -- I mean, with the $7,500, with the $15,000, if
a person says, oh, geez, I'd rather get the tax break, and I'll gamble
on having the lowest possible health insurance I can get, they do that,
and that way they're getting more money back from --
MS. BAICKER: But, see, the amount of money they get back is a flat
amount. It's the $15,000 standard deduction for a family no matter how
much their health insurance costs, that's the tax benefit that they get.
So then they decide how much do I want to spend on health insurance
based on all the things I could spend my money on.
MR. FRATTO: And just to be clear, there's a significant part of the
population today that are gambling on buying no health insurance or
being under-insured today because they can't afford it, and they
certainly can't afford it relative to those who receive the benefit
through their employers. And this gives them an added incentive to be
appropriately insured, or insured at all, which today they're not.
Q So just quickly, if we could talk just a little about the other
part of this plan, the President wants to redirect funds away from
institutions, I guess, towards states to help people get insurance. How
much money is going to be set aside for that component? And how many
people do you think will be insured ultimately at a result of that
effort?
MS. GOON: Well, I think that more of those details will be available in
the budget when it comes out. But it's dependent on how the states
react. A lot of states have come forward already with proposals that
would do similar things to what is being proposed in the Affordable
Choices Initiative. It is to be hoped that most states will look at
this as an opportunity to really take on the federal help that would
come to help reform their insurance marketplace in their state and help
subsidize coverage for the people that are currently uninsured in their
states.
Q You don't have, like, an order of magnitude? I mean, a ballpark
figure, what you think the government will be --
MS. BAICKER: I don't have it with me, no. And I think, as I said,
you'll see more of that in the budget when the budget comes out. And I
could --
MR. FRATTO: We have to leave something for after the President actually
announces this, Sheryl.
Q -- and the numbers of people that you would expect would be
insured? Will it be more than the 3 million?
MS. GOON: I don't know the answer to that, and we'd have to get back to
you.
Q Because if it's not, it, frankly, doesn't -- it doesn't seem like
you're really making that much of a dent in the problem. It's sort of
an admission that this problem of the uninsured is intractable, can't
really be solved.
MR. FRATTO: I think we are being -- I want to use caution to say this,
but I think we're being conservative in our estimates going forward on
this. I think we want to be very careful on our estimates. And we
certainly don't want to oversell, because a lot of us believe that it
will have a greater impact than what -- than the numbers that we've
shown you.
MS. BAICKER: That's exactly right.
Q Is the 3 million, and that this other component will be greater
than that?
MR. FRATTO: Greater than the 3 million that Kate mentioned?
MS. GOON: Yes, again, I don't know what the numbers are. But I think
these two policies working together we think are going to have a
substantial impact on getting people insured that currently do not have
insurance coverage.
MR. FRATTO: John.
Q Within this proposal, you are subsidizing health care purchased
outside the employer-based system, and, to some degree, taxing care
provided or insurance provided within that system. Is it right to look
at this as a step on the road away from the employer-based system, and
would that be a good thing, given the strain that's under, especially
given the competitive pressures on American companies?
MS. BAICKER: So, keep in mind that we're leveling the playing field
between the employer market and the individual non-group market. So
it's not that we're taxing one to pay for the other. People should get
the same tax benefit, no matter where they get their insurance.
That said, we've seen over the past many years a slow erosion of
employer offering, and it's really important that the people who turn to
the non-group market, whether it's from the group market or from being
uninsured, have a really well functioning individual market to turn to.
Part of that is giving them the resources they need to go get that
private insurance, such as through changes to the tax code. Part of it
is through taking care of the chronically ill or low income people who
can't afford to buy into that market, through state regulatory reforms,
through risk pooling, and that's the other piece of it. So those two
pieces go together to ensure that the non-group market that people are
increasingly turning to is there for them.
Q But is it the view of the administration that over time, it would
be a good thing to move away from the group market and toward a more
individual system?
MR. FRATTO: No, we're seriously agnostic on that. That comes down to
businesses and their employers and what they feel is the best
compensation package for them.
This is -- there's been a focus on taxing a portion of this population
out there. And I think -- if we want to look at it in terms of
taxation, what we're doing today is we're taxing the entire populace to
provide a benefit for a select group of Americans, where the potential
tax benefit they receive today is limited only by the sky. You could
have the most expensive health insurance policy that can be conceived,
and it will be subsidized by the tax code as it exists today. And all
we're saying is that there is a reasonable limit there. If we were
subsidizing cars, I don't know where the limit would be, but the limit
wouldn't be at the Bentley, it would be something more reasonable. And
that's what this is doing, and it applies to benefit across the spectrum
to all Americans.
So there's sort of a backward look at this, at looking at what it does
in terms of a tax hit on a certain population, where there has been a
tax hit on a large part of the population today to provide that 100
percent benefit. We're providing an equal benefit that's fairly shared
by all Americans, having the sole requirement of buying a basic health
insurance plan for themselves and their families, and that's all.
And we're going to end it there. Thank you.
END 4:49 P.M. EST
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