If Sen. John McCain, R-Arizona, wins the presidency, he likely will
propose a radical change in the way health care coverage is taxed, but observers
say health care reform proposals likely to pass Congress will be much more
modest.
Under McCain’s health care plan, all taxpayers would be eligible to receive
tax credits to offset the cost of health insurance premiums. For individual
coverage, the annual tax credit would be $2,500, while the available credit for
family coverage would be $5,000.
These credits would be available to those buying coverage on their own as
well as employees covered under group plans.
However, employees who receive coverage from their employers would be taxed
on employer-paid premiums.
McCain’s proposals would be a big change from current law, which he says is
unfair to those who buy coverage on their own.
Under current law, individuals buying their own coverage pay premiums with
after-tax dollars. By contrast, employees receiving group coverage are not taxed
on premiums paid by their employers, a tax savings of potentially thousands of
dollars a year, while employee-paid premiums almost always are made with pretax
dollars.
In advocating health care tax equity, Sen. McCain, who accepted the
Republican Party presidential nomination last week at the party’s national
convention in St. Paul, Minnesota, said making health care tax breaks available
to all taxpayers would make coverage more affordable.
“We want a system of health care in which everyone can afford and acquire the
treatment and preventive care they need,” McCain said in an earlier position
paper, Straight Talk on Health System Reform.
“Health care should be available to all and not limited by where you work or
how much you make,” McCain said in the position paper.
Such a proposal, though, would face rough sledding in Congress, observers
say. For employees with company-provided health insurance coverage, the kind of
change McCain advocates would result in additional taxable income, in some cases
amounting to a significant new tax bite.
Such a change “would come as a real surprise for employees that they would be
taxed on benefits they now receive tax-free,” said Paul Dennett, senior vice
president of health care reform for the American Benefits Council in
Washington.
The fear of a political backlash that likely would erupt from the millions of
employees who would be taxed on employer-paid health care benefits would make
federal legislators reluctant to back such a plan, observers say.
“This would be a minefield. It is hard to see any circumstances for an
agreement on this scale of change,” said Frank McArdle, a consultant with Hewitt
Associates in Washington.
The tax-free status of employer-provided coverage has long been a “sacred
cow,” said Steve Raetzman, a senior consultant with Watson Wyatt Worldwide in
Arlington, Virginia.
“No one in Congress has seen fit to back a change. And that is not very
likely to change,” Raetzman said.
While the health care tax plan may be a nonstarter in a McCain presidency,
other reform ideas backed by the Arizona Republican might receive a more
favorable reception.
For example, McCain favors improvements in the portability of health care
plans so employees could change jobs without the risk of losing coverage.
In his nomination acceptance speech last week, McCain said his health care
reform plan would “make it easier for Americans to find and keep good health
insurance.”
While McCain has not detailed exactly what he has in mind, improvements in
health care portability would build on a 1996 law that removed some roadblocks
for employees looking to change jobs. Under the Health Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act, employees who change jobs cannot be denied coverage for
pre-existing conditions by their new employer.
That politically popular law, though, has a number of exceptions that McCain
might try to loosen. For example, in order for the ban on pre-existing medical
condition exclusions to apply, employees can’t let coverage lapse for more than
two months.
“Improvements in portability is something Democrats and Republicans could
agree on,” McArdle said.
“This is one of the more logical areas Congress could address,” Raetzman
said.
Another area for which the odds are high for enactment in a McCain presidency
is parity in mental health care benefits, assuming Congress doesn’t reach a
final agreement on parity legislation in the remaining weeks of the current
session. Such legislation would mandate that employers provide the same coverage
for mental disorders as they offer for physical ailments.
“I would expect mental health care parity to be part of Sen. McCain’s health
care agenda,” said James Gelfand, senior health policy manager at the U.S.
Chamber of Commerce in Washington.
McCain endorses mental health care parity, as does the Republican Party
platform.
Observers also expect McCain to push for legislation to increase the appeal
of health savings accounts. In a position paper, he said that if elected he
would expand HSAs, which he described as “an important step in the direction of
putting families in charge of what they pay for.”
Congressional Democrats, especially those in the House, are likely to oppose
HSA legislation, but observers say such proposals shouldn’t be counted out.
While acknowledging enactment of HSA legislation would be difficult, observers
say Democrats might back such an expansion in exchange for presidential support
of measures they want.
Filed by Jerry Geisel of Business Insurance, a sister publication of
Workforce Management. To comment, e-mail editors@workforce.com.
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