Common Sense vs. the CBO on ObamaCare
by Morgen RichmondBoth the House and Senate versions of the healthcare reform bill would require employers above a certain size to provide health insurance for their workers or face some sort of penalty. The House bill that passed last month would require employers to pay an 8% additional payroll tax for not insuring their workers. The Senate bill now under consideration is much less punitive, requiring employers who do not provide insurance to pay a $750 annual fee per full-time worker, but only if one or more of their employees receive a government subsidy in the insurance exchange.

Quite a difference between the two bills. By way of example, take an employee earning $50,000 per year. Under the House bill, an employer who did not provide insurance would be required to pay an additional tax of $4,000 to the federal government. Compared to only $750 under the Senate bill – a difference of more than 500%.
Now consider whether it would make more sense financially for the employer to provide insurance or pay the penalty. In our example above, under the House bill it would probably be close to a break-even if the employer is providing coverage only for the employee. According to the most recent data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), the average monthly insurance premium for private industry employers across all worker categories was $317.63. Or just over $3800 annualized (compared to the $4,000 penalty). However, it would be quite a bit more expensive if the employer was providing family coverage (BLS data: $737.68/mo – $8850/yr).
Obviously under the Senate bill it would be far less expensive for the employer to just pay the $750 penalty rather than provide the insurance.
This is just one example, but importantly, note that under the House bill, the lower the average wage base of the employer, the more cost effective it would be for the employer to pay the 8% penalty rather than offer insurance coverage. In fact, an average wage base of $50K is probably close to the tipping point. An employer with average wages much lower than this would likely find it less expensive to not provide insurance for their employees. And correspondingly, any employer with an average wage higher than $50K would likely find it more cost effective to provide insurance.
Of course under the Senate bill, practically speaking there is no tipping point. Given the cost of health insurance, it would make far more financial sense for every employer to ante up the $750 per worker rather than provide health insurance.
So with the Senate bill especially, wouldn’t it be reasonable to assume that a large number of employers would elect to not provide insurance coverage once the bill goes into effect?
The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) doesn’t seem to think so. Based on their analysis of the Senate bill, by 2019 only 5 million fewer individuals will receive insurance coverage through an employer compared to current law. (Note that this total also includes family members who would otherwise receive coverage through an employer policy). With the CBO’s estimated total of 162 million people receiving employer-based coverage in 2019, that’s a reduction of only about 3%.
I’m going to give some examples to demonstrate why this defies common sense, but here’s why this is so critically important. The more people who do not receive coverage through an employer, the more who will wind up in the federal insurance exchange. And the more people in the insurance exchange, the more subsidies the government will be required to pay under the terms of the bill. Under the Senate bill, individuals and/or families earning up to 400% of the poverty level will receive some level of federal subsidy. With the CBO’s estimate of an average annual subsidy in excess of $5K per subsidized enrollee, the incremental cost could add up pretty quickly if their estimates turn out to be inaccurate.
Let’s assume under the Senate bill that 5% of individuals lose their employment based coverage rather than the 3% estimated by the CBO. (Still a very conservative estimate in my opinion). This would result in an additional 3 million individuals in the exchange, and an incremental annual subsidy cost of up to $15 billion. Even under the accounting method that the Democrats are using (accelerating revenues, and deferring costs), this would increase the initial 10 year cost of the bill by another $50-75 billion. Not an insignificant amount. And this total would be dramatically higher if a greater number of employers elect to dump their coverage. (A 10% drop in employer coverage would result in an additional cost in excess of $50 billion per year).
So why is the CBO estimate so low? I’m not exactly sure – hopefully a Senate Republican will press the CBO for a more detailed explanation of the data and assumptions that went into this calculation. My best guess based on the CBO analysis of an earlier House committee bill is that they are assuming that the competitive dynamic within the labor market will largely dissuade employers from dropping their insurance coverage. Because current and prospective employees will continue to demand this benefit as a condition of employment, and because any employer who does not offer insurance would have their talent raided by an employer who does.
While I think this will likely be an important factor in the higher end of the labor market, I don’t think this will be a compelling factor for many industries and professions farther down the wage scale. The reason is really quite simple: federal subsidies will be available for individuals to obtain insurance in the exchange.
Let’s take the example of a single large employer – like Wal-Mart – which currently offers health insurance for the majority of its employees (including many part-time employees). The average hourly wage of a full-time store worker at Walmart is just over $11/hr (source). Given that this wage level is very close to the federal poverty level, under the Senate bill most employees of Wal-Mart would be eligible for either Medicaid coverage at zero cost or a federal subsidy in the insurance exchange which would limit their annual cost to no more than 2-3% of their income.
Since most Wal-Mart employees who participate in the company-provided insurance plan contribute more than 3% of their income now (source: Wal-Mart Watch), they would actually be better off under the new government plan. And at a cost of only $750 per full-time worker, so would Wal-Mart. In the business world, this is what’s called a “win-win”.
Wal-Mart has over 2 million employees.
Granted they are probably the largest company which falls into this category, but how many other large retailers will be looking at this same calculus? Costco, Home Depot, McDonald’s, Starbucks…just to name a few. And how many other industries are there which consists primarily of people making less than $30K per year? More than a few, I’m sure. Considering the substantial savings for these employers, and considering that the majority of their workers will pay no more – and possibly less – in the insurance exchange than they do for their current coverage, the Senate bill is virtually rigged to lead low-wage employers to drop their coverage.
And if the prospect of spending only $750 per employee for health insurance costs is not enticing enough, there is one more big incentive for large employers with predominantly low-wage employees to ditch their coverage and send their workers to the federal exchange. Most very large employers (including Wal-Mart) self-insure, meaning they typically carry a large reserve on their books to cover the expected costs of the healthcare services its employees and their eligible family members will use in the future. (Wal-Mart, for example, reported an accrued liability of $3.1B for their self-insurance reserve as of 1/31/2009.)
Guess what happens to these reserves once the company passes off responsibility for their employees’ coverage to the feds? No more long-term liability, no more need for a reserve. Cha-ching, straight to the profit line.
Considering the clear incentives, along with a little common sense, the CBO’s estimate seems highly questionable at best. In fact, as implausible as it sounds, the CBO is actually forecasting that employer-based coverage will continue to grow over this timeframe. Based on the growth in the overall workforce. The 5 million figure really just represents a reduction in the growth rate of employer-based coverage, compared to what it would be under current law. (With the House bill, the CBO has gone even farther, estimating a net increase of 7 million people with employer-based coverage compared to current law.)
If nothing more than the accuracy of the number (and the credibility of the CBO) was at stake, it would be enough to just predict that they are wrong and see what happens down the road if the bill passes. However, given the importance of this estimate on the total cost of the bill, and the massive increase in federal spending which will result if the CBO is wrong, I think it’s deserving of a lot more scrutiny. Hopefully the Republican leadership will press the CBO for a more detailed analysis of this calculation.





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26 Comments
I'm just curious, for each person dropped from the company insurance plan, how much does that raise the cost to the taxpayers?
Let's not forget all the people that will refuse to pay the penalty for not having any insurance… The lost jobs (or job creation for the unemployed depending on how you look at it) when people are sent to prison for not having health insurance.
Of course all the numbers defy common sense, it's the old d.c. math. The point is we're all supposed to feel good that everyone's basic human right to healthcare (however tightly rationed and un-innovative) is going to be met because we're good people. Washington is a sick twisted joke…
The CBO has estimated that the average subsidy (or taxpayer cost) per subsidized enrollee in the exchange will grow from $4500/person to $5500/person between 2015 and 2019 under the Senate bill.
But whether this will be the average cost per person dropped from company insurance plans depends on how many of these individuals are eligible for subsidies. (Based on their income levels.)
However, I expect that a majority of them would be since this is the "win-win" scenario I described in my post. The employer saves a lot of money in insurance costs and the (lower wage) employees pay no more – or even less – for what may very well be superior coverage in the government insurance exchange.
Morgen
so if all doctors are govt. workers, now when we get sick we go to the govt. instead of the doctor
[...] From: BigGovernment.com [...]
I believe you were being sarcastic.
You have no basic human right to healthcare, free, affordable or otherwise.
The rights you do have are being trampled on by those who believe they will get free healthcare.
We all will end up getting screwed.
Even in the house bill think about the disincentive this also sets for increase in wages over time. If someone is currently making below the 50k mark but is getting healthcare from the employer and decides to dump there insurance and just pay the 8% fine. Now the employee is out of any decent health insurance and forced onto the govt plan. Any increase to that employees wages now increase there tax the company will have to pay which will effect any wage increases over time.
I currently have excellent healthcare with my current employer but my overall wages are less than the national average for my profession. I accepted this position because of the excellent benefits valued at significantly more than 8% of my overall pay. With the current plans to tax these "Cadillac" plans (last I heard something like a 40% tax on this) I am sure they would not be able to offer this coverage to me and end up dumping my coverage to just pay the fine as this would bankrupt most companies.
Yes Harry I was being sarcastic… I apologize, seems I get busted for that routinely these days. Oh well, I'll try one more time at the office Christmas party next week!
You are correct slayer of Libs! Kinda sucks
an apple a day keeps the govt. away
Common Sense? Well, that excludes liberals.
http://noliberalspin.blogtownhall.com/2009/12/02/...
The Anti Liberal Zone
It's so entertaining to see partisan hacks flip-flop over the CBO. When the numbers go their way, the CBO is great. When the number don't go their way, CBO's "credibility is at stake." And you wonder why no one takes you seriously in matters of governance?
[...] here: Big Government » Blog Archive » Common Sense vs. the CBO on ObamaCare By admin | category: cost insurance low medical | tags: health, not-enticing, prospect, [...]
McCain got One thing right. His proposal to give every working family a 4800 tax credit to purchase their own insurance was the best idea Ive heard. But of course to the cheating, lying left this would of removed their money grubbin fingers from OUR hard earned monies.
[...] post: Big Government » Blog Archive » Common Sense vs. the CBO on ObamaCare By admin | category: employed insurance medical self | tags: acceptable-bloom, [...]
The CBO can only deal with the numbers they are given. If Pelosi and Reed eliminate the doc fix and other costs and hide them in other appropriation bills to make the bottom line more palatable to the public, the CBO isn't getting the full picture. Hence, the numbers are more in line with what Obama claims he wants, yet the reality is probably almost twice that.
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Who is "you" in no one?
Ah yeah forgot man we are Anarchists, down with Capitalism, down with the Middle class, equal misery for all, wahoo!
Common sense based on experience is completely lacking in the health care takeover debate. Some things that go against my commin sense are:
1. I can not think of a single government program or agency that is well run. Why should I believe health care will be different?
2. I can not think of a single government program that came in at or under CBO estimates. For many reasons the government estimates are way off, often by a factor of 10 or more.
3. Common sense tells me there is no such thing as a free lunch. Yet, that is how government run health care is being packaged.
[...] Both the House and Senate versions of the healthcare reform bill would require employers above a certain size to provide health insurance for their workers or face some sort of penalty. The House bill that passed last month would …Read Original Story: Common Sense vs. the CBO on obamacare – Big Government (blog) [...]
Has anyone seen this? It's in the Gov't Health bill!
http://www.resistnet.com/group/lakelandpatrioticr...
Government Health Bill
Page 58 and 59: The government will have real-time access to an
individual's bank account and will have the authority to make electronic
fund transfers from those accounts.
Is this Constitutional? Is this what obama meant by redistributing the wealth? I think America needs to wake up !!
The Federal track record in management would disqualify them for the volunteer position of the local PTO treasurer.
The shift in power to the government in both proposals is much bigger than anything written into either bill. This effort places the levers of power into the hands of some very scary people (Google 'Deadly Doctors'). The legislation is just the springboard to grant unprecedented control to a small group of progressives that seem to deeply resent those who played by the rules, worked hard, and are capable of taking care of themselves. They are destroyers, for the mere joy of destroying.
[...] here: Big Government » Blog Archive » Common Sense vs. the CBO on ObamaCare By admin | category: cost health insurance low | tags: average, economic-climate, [...]