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Health Care Reform

Health Care Reform. Kaiser FF Tracking Survey. Outline of talk. What problems must reforms address? What have we learned from reform? Outline some current alternatives Examine some likely economic consequences. What we will not talk about?. Single payer.

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Health Care Reform

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  1. Health Care Reform

  2. Kaiser FF Tracking Survey

  3. Outline of talk • What problems must reforms address? • What have we learned from reform? • Outline some current alternatives • Examine some likely economic consequences

  4. What we will not talk about? Single payer

  5. Many countries have single-payer system • Generates low administrative costs but (arguably) poorer quality care • US companies process $700 billion in HC claims each year • The US is not about to get rid of a $700 billion industry

  6. What are the issues? • Cost/Expenditures • Fiscal (taxes and expenditures) • Equity • Coverage

  7. Expenditures on Medical Care • $2 trillion annually • 16% GDP • $6000/person • Twice as much as the median OECD country

  8. 90% more than Canada 145% more than the UK

  9. Individual plan $4,242 total Family plan $11,480 Average Annual PremiumsCovered Workers, 2006 (KFF)

  10. Are high expenditures a bad thing? • A key driver of health care costs is technology • MRIs/CT scans, angioplasty, anti-psychotropic drugs, hip/knee replacements, neo-natal intensive care, treatments for AIDS, statin drugs (Lipitor) • All not available 20 years ago. Now, commonplace

  11. HIV/AIDS Drugs • Early 1990s, 8% quarterly mortality rates for patients w/ AIDS • 1995:4, 1996:1, three new drug introduced to fight virus • Work by preventing the virus from replicating in the host • Usage rates increase immediately and aggregate mortality falls 70% in 18 months

  12. AIDS drugs are expensive, $12K/year in some cases • AIDS patients are expensive, $20K/year • This medical advance by construction increases lifetime spending by a considerably amount

  13. ARVs increase lifespan after diagnosis with AIDS by almost 8 years • Lifetime cost of treating an AIDS patient increases by about $250K • This is expensive, but compared to many other programs, it is relatively cheap on a cost-per-life-year saved amount

  14. NICU • Specialty wards of hospitals that provide “constant nursing and continuous cardiopulmonary and other support for severely ill infants” • Developed in late 1950 early 1970s • Growth has been rapid • NICU beds increased by 150% 1980-1995

  15. Costs, 2001 CA • NICU discharge $50,000 • Non-NICU, $4,500 • In CA, 10% of births are for a NICU • Therefore, more than half the hospital cost of childbirth are attributable to NICUs

  16. But…. not getting the bang per buck • Overhead costs are high (NEJM, 2003) • 31% in US • < 2% in Canada • Unnecessary care (Dartmouth Atlas) • 30% of care has little medical benefit • US performs poorly in comparison • Higher infant mortality • Lower life expectancy

  17. 4.3 years less than Japan 2.4 years Less than Canada

  18. If you want to cut costs, where do you look? • Administrative/overhead • Unnecessary procedures • Chronic conditions

  19. 1/3 of expenses from 5 chronic conditions

  20. What are the issues? • Cost/Expenditures • Fiscal (taxes and expenditures) • Equity • Coverage

  21. Government Insurance • Federal government – largest health insurance provider – 25% of the population is insured through the Fed gov’t • Medicaid and Medicare • 95 million covered in 2006 • $540 billion • 21 percent of the federal budget

  22. Medicare • 42.4 million recipients in 2006 • Costs in 2006 • $342 billion • 14% of Federal expenditures • Financing • Part A financed by payroll tax (2.9%) • Part B/D financed by premiums (25%) and general revenues (75%)

  23. Future problems • Costs of program are expected to escalate between now and 2030 • At the same time, fewer workers to tax • Medicare Trustees predict • Costs > revenues by 2011 • Trust fund exhausted by 2019

  24. What are the issues? • Cost/Expenditures • Fiscal (taxes and expenditures) • Equity • Coverage

  25. Tax Treatment of Employer-Provided Health Insurance • Income from your employer is taxable • You take the income and spend it on goods • Cars, house, food, etc. • Under the tax laws, your employer cannot provide you these items directly to avoid taxes. • ‘Company cars’ used to be popular fringe benefit, now they are severely restricted

  26. However, the Federal government has established some ‘tax preferred’ methods of compensation. • When you receive certain items, they are not taxed as income • Two largest categories • Pension contributions • Health insurance • Has been the case since 1954 • If college employee, tuition remission for your dependents

  27. Taxes then reduce the cost of health insurance • Because you do not have to purchase insurance in after tax dollars • Ignores other important advantages of group coverage • Lower administrative costs • less adverse selection

  28. History of tax preferred status • Modern health insurance began in 1930s • Blue Cross/Blue Shield – non-profit firms, began offering pre-paid plans for hosp and MD visits • Offered to groups of employees • The blues were a success so commercial forms began offering HI • <9% of population was covered by HI in 1940

  29. Why offered through employee groups? • Reduce adverse selection • Lower admin costs • Wage and price controls in effect • Restricted wage hikes • To keep workers, started to offer fringes in lieu of wages • 1942 stabilization act codified • 1943 administrative tax court decision that firm payments for life insurance were not taxable as income

  30. 1943 decision generated lots of uncertainty • Decision based on analysis from life insurance provided to employees • Some question about applicability to health insurance • Certainty resolved in 1954 by IRS ruling stating explicitly that employer-sponsored HI was indeed tax preferred

  31. Fraction of Population Covered by Private Insurance • Year Percent w/ Pvt Insurance • 1950 6.7% • 1960 50.6% • 1970 68.3% • 1980 78.1% • 1990 73.1% • 2000 72.3%

  32. Example: Impact of Tax preferred status • $1500 weekly earnings • Tax at 30% marginal rate (state+federal+FICA+medicare) • Suppose you can get insurance for $100/week • Implications of tax preferred status • Key assumption: firm does not care how they compensate you. They only care about the total cost of employment

  33. Firm is indifferent between paying you • $1500/week in wages or • $100/week in insurance, or $1400 in compensation • Both of these are expenses for the firm and treated equally as costs • What is the net after-tax income when health insurance is tax preferred and provided by the employer?

  34. Without tax preferred status Receive $1500 Minus taxes $450 After tax $1050 Insurance $100 Net income $ 950 With tax preferred status: firm gives you $100 worth of insurance and $1400 in income Receive $1400 Minus taxes $420 Net income $980

  35. You make $30/week on the deal • If the firm gives you money to buy insurance, the govt takes 30% away before you can spend it. • To get you $100 cash to buy an insurance policy, a firm would have to pay you $142.85 • Pay you $142.85 • After tax, $142.85(.7) = $100 • Notice that $42.85*.7 = $30

  36. Tax Benefit of EPHI • A family w/ $70,000 in income • 36.5% marginal tax rate • 25% federal • 3.5% state (Indiana) • ~8% Social Security and Medicare • Want to purchase $12,000 policy in AFTER TAX DOLLARS

  37. Without tax advantage: • Receive $18,897 in income • Pay 36.5% or $6,897 in taxes • $12,000 left over for health insurance • Net benefit of tax deduction is $6,897

  38. Inequalities • Tax break only available to people who receive insurance from their firm • Higher income families have higher tax rates so the tax benefit to them is greater • Costs over $210 billion/year

  39. What are the issues? • Cost/Expenditures • Fiscal (taxes and expenditures) • Equity • Coverage

  40. Coverage • Uninsurance is a persistent problem in US • Dimensions of the problem • 47 million people • 16% of population • 9 million children • Uninsurance rates have increased steadily over time

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