Bipartisan Policy Center: 'Improving and Strengthening Employer-Sponsored Insurance'
Here are excerpts:
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
1 ... GLOSSARY OF ACRONYMS
2 ... EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
7 ... INTRODUCTION
13 ... RECOMMENDATIONS
13 ... Section I: Increase Transparency in the Health Care System
20 ... Section II: Empower Employers with Payment and Pricing Tools
29 ... Section III: Address Market Power Dynamics
41 ... Section IV: Provide Other Options for Health Insurance Affordability
47 ... CONCLUSION
48 ... ENDNOTES
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EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
Some 58.1% of non-elderly Americans (158 million people) receive health care benefits through their employers as of 2019, making employer-sponsored insurance (ESI) the nation's largest source of health coverage. ESI is the foundation for the nation's public-private health system, but rising health care costs continue to put pressure on employers seeking to offer the same level of benefits and to boost wages. Similarly, employees are seeing their health insurance premiums rise in the face of stagnant real wages. Even the largest private employers lack the resources or market power to prompt and sustain the systemwide changes needed to improve the value they receive for their health care spending. They must contend with
Today, employers offer a spectrum of ESI plans: Some are generous, while others do not meet employee needs. Lower-income workers are less likely to get their health coverage through ESI, which raises equity concerns. Lower-income employees who receive health coverage via ESI are also more likely than their higher-income counterparts to skimp on medical care and prescriptions, have problems paying their medical bills, and visit an emergency room.
Nonetheless, ESI is a popular benefit with employees. Employers offer health care benefits to recruit and retain employees, and they see the value of maintaining those benefits, especially in the face of talent shortages and resignations. In
Total health spending has grown from 6.9% of the economy in 1970 to nearly 20% in 2020. In inflation-adjusted terms, per capita health spending rose from
What is driving health care cost increases? Multiple studies have shown that unit prices, or the prices for individual services and products, are the largest contributor to health care cost growth. Health care prices rose 16% from 2012 to 2016--four times as fast as inflation. Hospital spending represented the lion's share of
As a result, the Biden administration and
Policymakers have made no major changes to the health care system, including ESI, since the Affordable Care Act of 2010. Costs, however, continue to rise, increasing the financial burdens on employers and employees alike. Although policymakers on both the left and right promote policies that would ultimately end the nation's reliance on ESI as a primary source of insurance coverage, such shifts would likely result in considerable disruption and currently do not have widespread political support. For policymakers across the political spectrum, strategies intended to strengthen ESI may thus be considered a reasonable way to address cost challenges.
Policymakers and other stakeholders should take steps in four areas. First, they should increase transparency in the health care system. Information about prices for products and services is readily available in most markets, but health care is a notable exception. A
Second, policymakers and other stakeholders should empower employers to help lower costs by giving them payment and pricing tools that would help create a higher value ESI system that prioritizes employee health outcomes. To constrain prices and improve quality, policymakers should, through legislation and regulation, enable employers to design better provider networks.
Third, policymakers and other stakeholders should address problems in the private health care market. Negotiations between providers and payers shape market prices. Prices are also shaped by geography, the demand for services, the market power of providers and payers, and other factors. Employers often do not possess enough market power to negotiate lower prices due to the consolidation of health care providers. Provider consolidation continues to accelerate, with nearly 67% of hospital markets now considered highly or very highly concentrated. Consolidation often drives health care price increases, according to a large body of evidence. BPC has proposed policies to equalize market power dynamics to foster a more competitive employer-sponsored health insurance system.
Finally, policymakers should consider other legislative and regulatory steps to make health insurance more affordable. While more than 70% of workers, on average, accept employer-sponsored health care when it is offered, the figure is only 63% among firms that employ larger shares of lower-wage workers, such as part-time and temporary workers. Employees at firms with more low-wage workers pay higher premiums as a share of their incomes than employees at firms with fewer low-wage workers. These figures suggest that ESI remains less affordable, and as a result perhaps less desirable, for lower-wage employees. The administration could consider providing guidance on and make improvements to alternatives to traditional group health plans that allow employers to offer more affordable coverage to their employees.
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CONCLUSION
Although a majority of Americans rely on employer-sponsored insurance for their health benefits, ESI is on an unsustainable trajectory due to high and rising health care costs. Policymakers must act to address underlying cost drivers and empower employers with payment and pricing tools.
Administrators, policymakers, and regulators can restrain costs and improve the ESI system by increasing transparency in the health care system and ensuring existing transparency laws produce actionable data. Such changes would give employers the tools needed to design high value networks and address market power dynamics. This would also ensure that employers have other options for extending health insurance affordability.
Improving and strengthening our current system is the most politically viable approach to improving health outcomes and controlling health care cost growth.
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View full report at: https://bipartisanpolicy.org/download/?file=/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/BPC-Improving-and-Strengthening-Employer-Sponsored-Insurance-Oct-2022.pdf
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