Members of Congress will soon have an opportunity to make a crucial decision about how to deal with the problem of uninsurance in America. The broadest and most effective approach would be for Congress to finance a new system of refundable income tax credits for health insurance, which would give individuals and families direct assistance in purchasing health care coverage. Several bills before Congress, particularly legislation introduced by Senator Jim Jeffords (I-VT) and Representatives Richard Armey (R-TX) and John Cooksey (R-LA), incorporate this approach.
Recently released U.S. Bureau of the
Census figures indicate that 39.3 million Americans were without
health insurance in 1999. The fiscal year (FY) 2002 budget
resolution approved by the House and Senate in May authorizes $28
billion in either spending or revenue reduction over three years to
make health insurance available for the uninsured. Some in Congress
propose extending Medicaid to more people. Others propose enrolling
adults in the State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP).
Some suggest providing a tax credit to employers, and others
propose an income tax deduction for the purchase of health
insurance. Although the laudable intent of these proposals is to
reduce the number of uninsured, these approaches would merely
expand inferior or
inefficient government programs while failing to get the job
done.
The challenge for Congress will be to reduce the numbers of uninsured low-income Americans without exposing the federal government or the states to greater financial obligations that hamper their ability to reach all those who need help. The choice for Congress is clear: It can expand the existing inefficient bureaucratic government programs that are inferior in the delivery of care, or it can promote patient choice and free market competition in the ailing health care system by allowing individuals to make their own key health care decisions.
Principles for an Effective Tax Credit Proposal.An effective tax credit proposal must be:
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Individualized. Targeting tax credits at the individual would encourage uninsured Americans to obtain health coverage.
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Refundable/Advanceable. Making individual tax credits refundable is important because it will enable individuals, even those who owe no taxes, to use the credit at the time they purchase a policy without having to wait for a tax refund.
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Transferable. For administrative reasons, the credits should be transferable to a private insurer, much as is done in the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program (FEHBP).
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Meaningful. The tax credit must be large enough to offset at least partially the average cost of health insurance coverage. Recent studies have shown that achieving this goal may not be as difficult as is often assumed.
Benefits of Individual Tax
Credits.
The best way to ensure that those who do not have coverage
obtain it is to give them a positive incentive to buy the coverage
they need. Tax credits would provide that incentive. They
promote:
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Choice by enabling individual workers and their families to choose the coverage that best fits their personal medical needs.
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Control by enabling individuals, not their employer or a bureaucrat, to decide which coverage they are to buy.
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Continuity by creating true portability, thereby ensuring that coverage will no longer be contingent upon one's employment or employment status.
Current Legislative
Proposals.
Senator Jeffords and Representatives Armey and Cooksey have
introduced tax credit bills that recognize these principles and
benefits. The Relief, Equity, Access, and Coverage (REACH) Act (S.
590), the Fair Care for the Uninsured Act (H.R. 1331), and the
Patient Access, Choice and Equity (PACE) Act (H.R. 2250) each would
provide refundable tax credits to the uninsured to assist them in
the purchasing of health insurance for themselves and their
families. These bills all follow the above-cited four key
principles and offer a framework to which other ideas that promote
individual decisionmaking could be added.
Conclusion.
In considering these bills, the 107th Congress, working with the
Bush Administration, has an opportunity to write a fresh new
chapter in federal health care policy. Instead of building on
bureaucratic structures or relying on outmoded welfare programs,
they can promote personal choice in health plans and benefits by
transferring decisionmaking power in the health care system to
individuals and families. Such an approach would make health plans
more accountable to their consumers and Americans more satisfied
with their plans.
Nina Owcharenko is Health Care Policy Analyst at The Heritage Foundation.