American Action Forum: 'Economic Headwinds and a Public Option'
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Executive Summary
* President-elect
* According to recent research, while it is possible to structure a public option so that the deficit is reduced, the most likely structure--where premiums are subsidized and provider reimbursement resembles private coverage--would cost an estimated
* Finding the revenue to finance such a plan could result in a 0.7 point increase in the hospital insurance tax, a 12.4 percentage point increase on upper incomes, or perhaps some version of a wealth tax, which would cost workers
* The near-term economic impact of the most likely tax changes ranges from 0.1 to 0.6 percentage point declines in gross domestic product.
Introduction
President-elect
The proposal does not address costs, premiums or financing. Biden has proposed separately, however, making ACA premium tax credits available to those with incomes above 400 percent of the federal poverty level (FPL) and increasing the generosity of those tax credits. It is reasonable to assume that the public option, which is intended to be more affordable than other insurance options, would be subsidized at the same or even a more generous level than other options offered in the ACA marketplaces. This brief analysis explores the most likely public option proposal structure, corresponding tax increases, and overall cost impact. This is the first in a series of short pieces on the potential effects of a public option.
Possible Structural Scenarios
With so few details, estimating the likely deficit impact of a public option is difficult, though Biden's campaign has suggested the plan could cost
Scenario 1: Actuarially Sound Premiums with Varying Reimbursement Rates and Market Participation
The report details four variations on this scenario, two in which the public option is only available to those in the individual and small-group market, and two in which the public option is also extended to large-group plans. Because Biden has said his public option will be available to everyone who has ESI, a scenario where those in the large group market are able to access the public option is closest to the Biden proposal, so this analysis only considers the large group-inclusive scenarios. It should be noted that the report assumes employers will be able to purchase public option plans on behalf of their employees, but it is unclear if Biden intends this, or if his plan would only give employees the option of electing the public plan in lieu of ESI.
* Scenario 1a: In this scenario the report assumes that premiums will remain actuarially sound, or in other words, that enrollees will pay premiums set high enough to cover 100 percent of health care costs. Further, it assumes that payment rates for providers will remain the same as Medicare rates over time. This is most often how proponents of a public option frame their proposals. In such a scenario, the total impact would be a net deficit reduction of
* Scenario 1b: In this scenario, the report argues that provider groups would be negatively impacted by the low Medicare reimbursement rates and that over a five-year period
Table 1: Premiums Are Not Artificially Capped and Remain Actuarially Fair
Both scenarios are unlikely because
Scenario 2: Premiums Are Indexed to Inflation
As in the first scenario, the report offers four variations, while this analysis focuses on the two scenarios that are closest to what Biden has proposed.
* Scenario 2a: In this scenario, the report assumes that provider reimbursement stays locked at Medicare rates, but it assumes that lawmakers, subject to pressure from constituents, will find it politically untenable to maintain actuarially sound premiums and will instead limit premium growth to the rate of inflation. Under this scenario, the deficit is reduced by
* Scenario 2b: In this scenario the report assumes that
Table 2: Premiums Are Indexed to Inflation
Like the earlier scenarios, scenario 2a results in some measure of deficit reduction. Nevertheless, all three scenarios that reduce the deficit require policymakers to substantially reduce provider payments or maintain enrollee costs at high actuarial costs that are unlikely to make the public option attractive and that run contrary to President-elect Biden's stated objectives. The most likely scenario is the last one, which anticipates a reversion to the mean in terms of policymaker behavior: increasing provider reimbursement over time, and acting to limit enrollee costs through federal subsidies. In this scenario, the report projects an increase in the federal deficit of
Broad-Based Financing
Assuming that the proposed public option bill is written to be budget neutral and may even be passed using the budget reconciliation process, it will be necessary to finance the project at a total of approximately
The FICA Tax System
The federal tax system has four means of taxation: income, payroll, corporate, and other (e.g. excise taxes, Federal Reserve Remittances, certain fees). Payroll taxes are the second-largest type of federal taxation by share of revenue collected, bringing in
Payroll taxes, technically the Federal Insurance Contributions Act (FICA) taxes, fund the nation's large social insurance programs:
The second programmatic component to FICA taxes is the tax levied on wages devoted to the hospital insurance (HI) trust fund under Medicare. This levy is 1.45 percent and is imposed on both the employer and employee, for a combined tax rate of 2.9 percent. Unlike the OASDI tax, this tax rate is applied to all earnings. The ACA also applied an additional HI surtax of 0.9 percent on earned income exceeding
Combined, FICA taxes amount to a rate of 15.3 percent on all earnings up to
Table 3:
Financing a Public Option Through the Payroll Tax
The FICA tax system is more akin to social insurance premiums rather than a revenue collection mechanism in that the taxes collected are entirely earmarked for social insurance programs. Indeed,
Table 4: Revenue Effects of Payroll Tax Increases
Note that a 0.6 percentage point increase would be slightly insufficient to finance a
An across-the-board HI tax increase would reflect a relatively modest rate increase on a very broad tax base. Accordingly, the tax increase would result in relatively small changes in after-tax income and would largely reflect the distribution of taxable income. For example, for taxpayers making
Table 5: Distribution Table (2021)
Economic Effects
The rationale for financing a federal health insurance product through a payroll tax is rooted in equity and efficiency. With a large tax base, a relatively modest rate increase can raise significant revenue with fewer distortions than would be the case if the public option were financed through a narrower tax, such as just on higher income earners or other surtaxes. Of course, this approach would also end up taxing some of the lower-income earners who are presumably uninsured in order to create a public option that would allow them a somewhat more affordable health insurance alternative.
Over the short term, all else equal, one would expect to see a modest decline in aggregate demand under this tax. While the payroll tax system is more stable than the individual and corporate income tax systems, it has recently figured more prominently in debates over fiscal intervention. Indeed, during the Great Recession,
For instance, the
Financing a Public Option Through an Upper Income Tax or Wealth Tax
If
Similarly, instead of a broad-based labor income tax, policymakers could consider a wealth tax, similar in structure to those proposed by Senators
Conclusion
In addition to the revenue needed to shore up the severely underfunded
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Footnotes:
[1] https://joebiden.com/healthcare/#
[2] https://www.politico.com/story/2019/07/15/joe-biden-health-care-plan-1415850
[4] https://www.fiscal.treasury.gov/files/reports-statements/mts/mts0920.pdf
[5] http://www.ssa.gov/pressoffice/factsheets/HowAreSocialSecurity.htm
[6] https://www.ssa.gov/OACT/COLA/cbb.html
[7] https://www.ssa.gov/oact/progdata/taxRates.html
[8] See: https://compute.studio/PSLmodels/Tax-Brain/
[9] https://budgetmodel.wharton.upenn.edu/issues/2020/3/12/president-trump-payroll-tax-holiday
[10] http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/124xx/doc12437/11-15-Outlook_Stimulus_Testimony.pdf
[11] http://www.nber.org/papers/w15421
[13] https://www.nber.org/system/files/working_papers/w21220/w21220.pdf
[14] https://www.cbo.gov/publication/24725
[15] https://www.cbpp.org/research/letting-payroll-tax-cut-expire-would-shrink-worker-paychecks-and-damage-weak-economy#_ftn5
[16] https://taxfoundation.org/global-evidence-taxes-and-economic-growth-payroll-taxes-have-no-effect/
[17] https://taxfoundation.org/2020-payroll-tax-proposals/#_ftn11
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View tables at https://www.americanactionforum.org/research/economic-headwinds-and-a-public-option/
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