IMPACT OF THE HOUSE BILL ON RETIREE DRUG COVERAGE
While similar in design, the drug provisions in H.R. 1 are less complex than those in the Senate bill and, at 170 pages, also 44 pages briefer. Still, employers who currently offer retiree drug coverage would face the same basic set of options under the House bill as they would under the Senate bill.
However, there are three main differences in the House bill that would influence employer decisions in ways that might result in effects that are somewhat different from those that would be experienced under the Senate bill.
First, the House bill's definition of "actuarial equivalence" for the purpose of determining that an employer-sponsored plan offers an acceptable alternative to the standard coverage structure is less rigid than the definition in the Senate bill.5 This makes it easier for existing employer-sponsored drug plans to meet the "qualified coverage" test if they elect to conform their plan to the new Medicare requirements. As a result, it is somewhat more likely that under the House bill, more employers would opt to make their existing plan a "qualified plan" with possibly less scaling back of coverage than would be the case under the Senate bill.
Second, for employer-sponsored qualified plans, the House bill provides a subsidy of 28 percent of the cost of drugs in excess of the $250 annual deductible for each qualified beneficiary, up to a maximum of $5,000 per year.6 These subsidies to employers are less generous for beneficiaries with low drug costs and more generous for beneficiaries with high drug costs than those in the Senate bill.
Third, the lower front-end cost-sharing structure in the House bill's coverage design means that it will be less costly for employers who decide to offer wrap-around coverage. Under the Senate bill, an employer offering wrap-around coverage would spend $2,387.50 in paying the deductible and initial cost-sharing on the first $4,500 in drug expenses, or $2,807.50 if the employer also reimbursed the retiree for the estimated $420 annual premium. In contrast, under the House bill, an employer offering wrap-around coverage would spend only $600 in paying the deductible and initial cost-sharing on the first $2,000 in drug expenses, or $1,020 if the employer also reimbursed the retiree for the estimated $420 annual premium.
The House Paradox. The paradox, then, is that the House bill makes it easier than the Senate bill for employers to retain a more generous drug plan, but it also makes it cheaper for employers to scale back coverage by substituting a wrap-around plan for their current plan. On the one hand, the less onerous provisions in the House bill would make it easier for employers to have their current plan approved by Medicare as a "qualified" plan, and thus keep offering their retirees generous coverage.
On the other hand, the more comprehensive front-end coverage structure of the Medicare drug benefit in the House bill would make it easier, and much cheaper, than in the Senate bill for employers to offer wrap-around coverage. With basic wrap-around coverage, for just over $1,000 per retiree, employers could make the first $2,000 of drug costs totally free to their retirees and then off-load on to their retirees and Medicare all of the costs and risks for retiree drug spending in excess of $2,000 per individual.
EFFECT ON EMPLOYER WRAP-AROUND DRUG COVERAGE
Of the three options that either bill would present to employers, the simplest and most attractive one for them is the option of substituting wrap-around coverage for their current plans. With that approach, the employer off-loads most of the cost and risk of retiree drug coverage while still pleasing the majority of its retirees who have relatively low annual drug bills. Although some employers may drop their existing coverage entirely, the more likely scenario is that most employers will sooner or later substitute wrap-around coverage for their existing, more comprehensive plans.
The problem with this approach for the retiree is that, under both bills, none of the amounts paid by employer wrap-around benefits to cover the deductible and initial cost-sharing would count toward the out-of-pocket limits. This means that employer wrap-around coverage would have the effect of aggregating together all of the cost-sharing in one large coverage gap or "doughnut hole," which would then kick in at the point at which the employer's wrap-around coverage ended.
Effect of the Senate Bill
In practice, the Senate bill would set in motion the following dynamics. The retiree enrolls in one of the new Medicare drug plans and pays about $420 a year in premiums. Under the Senate version, the employer reimburses the retiree for the premiums and pays the $275 deductible as well as the 50 percent coinsurance on the next $4,225 in drug expenses (or $2112.50). At that point, the retiree has consumed $4,500 in drugs and not paid a single penny in either premiums or out-of-pocket cost-sharing. The employer has paid the $420 in premiums, the $275 deductible, and the $2,112.50 in coinsurance for a total cost of $2,807.50. Medicare has paid the remaining $1,692.50 in drug spending.
From that point on, Medicare pays nothing. If the employer also caps its program at that level, then the retiree must pay 100 percent of the cost of the next $3,700 in drug expenses, after which Medicare will then start paying 90 cents of each additional dollar with the retiree paying the remaining 10 percent.
Chart 1 shows how, under the Senate bill, this scenario will result in retirees' drug spending being distributed among employers, retirees, and Medicare.7 It also shows how employers will be able to create a stop-loss limit for themselves by converting their exiting retiree drug plans into wrap-around coverage.

As can be seen in the chart, under S. 1, an employer is able to create a stop-loss for itself at the level of $2,387.50 of the first $4,500 per year in drug spending per retiree. However, neither Medicare nor the retirees have a true stop-loss. The indexing of the deductible and the "initial coverage limit" for the coinsurance means that the employer's per-retiree drug spending stop-loss will rise over time but will still remain a true stop-loss.
However, thanks to the generosity of the employer in providing wrap-around coverage, the point at which the program's "catastrophic level" co-pay of only 10 percent kicks in for the retiree has been pushed up from $5,812.50 in total drug spending to $8,200 in total drug spending. At that point, of the total $8,200 in drug spending, the employer will have paid $2,387.50, or 29 percent; Medicare will have paid $2112.50, or 26 percent; and the retiree will have paid $3,700, or 45 percent.
Thus, the effect of the employer's offering wrap-around coverage will be to increase the burden on those retirees with higher drug costs. This can be seen in Chart 2, which shows the percentage share of drug spending for the employer, the retiree, and Medicare at each level using the same data as in Chart 1.

Under the Senate bill, due to the employer's creating an effective stop-loss, the proportionate share paid by the employer declines as the level of drug spending increases. In contrast, the retiree's proportionate share of the spending increases dramatically once the employer's wrap-around coverage stops and only starts to decline once the retiree has spent an additional $3,700 and met Medicare's "out-of-pocket limit."
Effect of the House Bill
A similar, though somewhat different, effect occurs under H.R. 1. Under the House bill, the employer reimburses the retiree for the premiums and pays the $250 deductible as well as the 20 percent coinsurance on the next $1,750 in drug expenses (or $350). At that point, the retiree has consumed $2,000 in drugs and not paid a single penny in either premiums or out-of-pocket cost-sharing. The employer has paid the $420 in premiums, the $250 deductible, and the $350 in coinsurance for a total cost of $1,020. Medicare has paid the remaining $1,400 in drug spending.
From that point on, Medicare pays nothing. If the employer also caps its program at that level, then the retiree must pay 100 percent of the cost of the next $3,500 in drug expenses, after which Medicare will then pay all additional costs.
Chart 3 shows how, under the House bill, this scenario will result in retiree' drug spending being distributed among employers, retirees, and Medicare.

Once again, the chart shows how, under H.R. 1, the employer is able to create a stop-loss for itself. The difference in this case is that the employer can set that level as low as $600 of the first $2,000 per year in drug spending per retiree. However, in the House bill, after the retiree has spent $3,500 out-of-pocket, he or she also reaches a true stop-loss. The indexing of the deductible, the "initial coverage limit" for the coinsurance, and the retiree stop-loss means that both the employer's and the retiree's stop-loss levels will rise over time but will still remain true stop-losses.
Again, thanks to the generosity of the employer, the point at which the program's stop-loss kicks in for the retiree has been pushed up from $4,900 in total drug spending to $5,500 in total drug spending. At that point, of the total $5,500 in drug spending, the employer will have paid $600, or 11 percent; Medicare will have paid $1,400, or 25 percent; and the retiree will have paid $3,500, or 64 percent.
Thus, the effect of the employer's offering wrap-around coverage will again be to increase the burden on those retirees with higher drug costs, though not as much as in the Senate bill. This can be seen in Chart 4, which shows the percentage share of drug spending for the employer, the retiree, and Medicare at each level using the same data as in Chart 3.

As with the Senate bill, the effect under the House bill is that, since the employer can create a stop-loss, the proportionate share paid by the employer declines as the level of drug spending increases. In contrast, the retiree's proportionate share of the spending increases dramatically once the employer's wrap-around coverage stops and starts to decline only after the retiree has spent an additional $3,500 and met Medicare's stop-loss. However, because the House bill includes a true stop-loss for the retiree, his or her share of the total cost declines more rapidly than in the Senate bill as the level of drug spending increases.
IMPACT OF S. 1 AND H.R. 1 ON EXISTING MEDIGAP COVERAGE
Medicare enrollees without employer-provided Medicare supplemental coverage are able to buy supplemental coverage on their own. Such plans are commonly called Medigap plans. Federal law permits insurers to sell 10 different types of standardized Medigap plans. Three of the plans (plans H, I, and J) provide "front-end" prescription drug coverage. In all three, the beneficiary pays a $250 deductible, and the plan reimburses the beneficiary 50 percent of the cost of drugs up to an annual maximum amount. In the case of plans H and I, the maximum amount is $1,250, and in the case of plan J, the maximum amount is $3,000. Thus, the beneficiary pays all of the first $250 a year in drugs plus half of the next $2,500 or $6,000 (depending on the plan), plus any drug costs beyond those limits.
An estimated 4.8 million Medicare beneficiaries currently have additional coverage for drugs through one of the three standard Medigap plans.
Impact of the Senate Bill
Section 103 of S. 1 would ban the sale or renewal of Medigap plans with prescription drug coverage after January 1, 2006, to any Medicare beneficiary who is enrolled in a new Medicare Part D prescription drug plan. Beneficiaries with coverage under one of those Medigap plans would be allowed to switch to any other Medigap plan that did not include drug coverage.
Thus, beneficiaries with those plans would be forced to choose between their existing drug coverage and the new Medicare drug coverage. If they opted to keep their existing Medigap coverage, they would be penalized with higher premiums if they tried to enroll later in the Medicare Part D drug benefit.
The Senate bill, in effect, would all but eliminate Medigap plans with prescription drug coverage. The result would be that retirees would have no way of obtaining insurance, other than employer-sponsored wrap-around coverage, to pay the cost-sharing under the Senate version of the Medicare drug benefit.
Impact of the House Bill
The House bill differs from the Senate bill in that, while it eliminates current Medigap plans with drug coverage in the future, it "grandfathers" enrollees who already have such coverage and allows them to keep it. Under the House bill, any Medicare enrollee with a part H, I, or J Medigap policy in force on January 1, 2006, would be able to keep that policy or switch to a new policy of the same type. Also, the House bill instructs the National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC) to develop two new standard Medigap plans that include coverage for the cost-sharing (other than the deductible) in the new Medicare Part D prescription drug plan.8
Thus, under H.R. 1, Medicare enrollees with Medigap plans that pay for prescription drugs could enroll in the new Medicare Part D drug benefit and keep their Medigap coverage to pay the cost-sharing. Also, in the future, Medicare beneficiaries would be able to buy new Medigap plans that covered some of the cost-sharing of the Part D drug benefit.
However, as with any payments made by employer wrap-around policies, any payments for drugs made by a Medigap plan would not count toward the beneficiary's stop-loss under the new Medicare Part D prescription drug plan.9 The resulting effects are similar to those for employer wrap-around coverage.
Chart 5 shows the percentage share of drug spending for the retiree, Medigap, and Medicare for Medigap plans H and I, which offer "basic" drug coverage that reimburses $1,250 of the beneficiary's out-of-pocket costs. The effect is similar to that for employer wrap-around coverage under the House bill, as can be seen by comparing Chart 5 with Chart 4. In both cases, the beneficiary bears the largest share of the costs when total annual drug spending is at about the $6,000 level.

Similarly, Chart 6 shows the percentage share of drug spending for the retiree, Medigap, and Medicare for Medigap plan J, which offers "enhanced" drug coverage that reimburses $3,000 of the beneficiary's out-of-pocket costs. The effect is similar to that for employer wrap-around coverage under the Senate bill, as can be seen by comparing Chart 6 with Chart 2. In both cases, the beneficiary bears the largest share of the costs when total annual drug spending is at about the $8,000 level.

As the distributional effects in Charts 5 and 6 show, combining Medigap drug coverage with the new Medicare Part D drug benefit serves only to push the beneficiary's cost-sharing up to a higher level of total annual drug spending. It does not buy what the beneficiary really wants--coverage for the initial cost-sharing and the "doughnut hole" coverage gap in the Medicare drug benefit design.
This means that the extra Medigap coverage is almost certainly not worth the much higher premiums beneficiaries must pay for plans H, I, and J. Consequently, under the House bill, most retirees who currently have Medigap plans that cover drugs will likely choose to switch to a Medigap policy without drug coverage (and with a lower premium).
Thus, under either the House or Senate bill, retirees without employer coverage will, in the future, have no realistic way to obtain private insurance to cover the costs of the deductible, cost-sharing, or coverage gap in the new Medicare Part D drug plan.
GIVING A MEDICARE DRUG ENTITLEMENT TO SENIORS--AND COURTING A BACKLASH
Not surprisingly, as more and more retirees begin to digest the implications of the new Medicare drug benefit in S. 1 and H.R. 1, they are becoming less and less enamored of Congress's handiwork. Those who currently enjoy employer-provided retiree drug benefits are right to be concerned about the negative effects the legislation would have on their current coverage. As was the case with the 1988 Medicare Catastrophic legislation, those legitimate concerns hold the potential for a serious senior citizen backlash.
Federal Retirees' Conscientious Exemption. There is solid evidence that a backlash is already brewing. For example, the National Association of Retired Federal Employees (NARFE), a large and powerful organization representing retired federal workers, recently announced its opposition to both the House and Senate bills for exactly that reason.10 NARFE is now seeking additional legislation to prevent the retiree drug coverage its members currently receive through the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program (FEHBP) from being reduced to the level of the new Medicare Part D drug coverage.11 The House passed the legislation on July 8, but the Senate has yet to act on it.12 While NARFE may succeed in protecting the current drug coverage of its members, retirees with drug coverage through private-sector or state and local government retirement plans may not be as fortunate.
And the Rest of Us. There is a curious political dynamic behind this coming retiree misfortune. Unlike federal retirees, private and state and local retirees who want to preserve their current drug coverage might find their interests opposed, not only by members of both houses of Congress--who are insisting on a universal drug entitlement of unknown cost--but also by their own former bosses and even their own union representatives. For example, according to the Detroit Free Press, United Auto Workers (UAW) retirees are voicing their concerns that if Congress passes a Medicare drug benefit that saves their former employers money while costing retirees more, their union representatives will simply shift to bargaining for other benefits instead.13
Then, of course, there are the nation's employers, particularly the large corporations. A recent report in The New York Times notes that the pending Medicare legislation offers
some of the largest U.S. employers a long-sought prize: shifting at least some of their burden of soaring drug costs to the federal government. With billions of dollars at stake, those companies are lobbying hard to make sure that those gains survive in the final version of the law. The effort is being led by a shrinking number of companies that pay for health coverage for millions of retired workers--notably General Motors Corp., Ford Motor Co., Verizon Communications Inc., SBC Communications Inc., International Business Machines Corp. and Caterpillar Inc.... By some accounts, Ford alone could save $50 million a year.... "It is clear that employers will react by scaling back their drug coverage for retirees," said Jonathan Gruber, an economics professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.14
THE CASE FOR GOING BACK TO THE DRAWING BOARD
Medicare is governed by central planning and administered pricing. Its problems stem from basic design flaws, and the current lack of coverage for outpatient prescription drugs is not the greatest of those flaws.
Rather, the biggest flaw is that Medicare is provider-centered instead of being patient-centered. Instead of subsidizing the elderly to buy private coverage, Medicare pays doctors and hospitals directly, on a per-procedure basis. The result is that Medicare patients are treated in an episodic, fragmented, acute-care fashion rather than an integrated, chronic-care fashion. Then, to control Medicare spending, Congress and the bureaucracy have piled on price and access controls that further distort or limit the care seniors receive.
Simply grafting a new drug benefit onto an unreformed Medicare program, as S. 1 or H.R. 1 would do, means not only that retiree health care will continue to cost more than it should, but also that Medicare will continue to deliver poorer results than it should.
Today, elderly health care is driven less and less by medical necessity and best practices and more and more by which services and treatment settings offer better Medicare reimbursement. This is bad health policy, but it is also inherent in Medicare's current structure.
The current Medicare structure also discourages innovation. Retirees now lag behind the non-elderly in getting access to new treatments, devices, and procedures. The Medicare bureaucracy must first approve every medical innovation--and give it a price before doctors can provide it to their elderly patients. The approval process can, and does, take years.
Furthermore, the inherent weakness in Medicare's design is not limited to the benefit gaps or the sluggish nature of its response to new treatments, procedures, and medical technologies. Added to all these other problems is the burden of the voluminous regulations and paperwork Medicare relentlessly imposes on doctors, hospitals, and other medical professionals. While most physicians today treat Medicare patients, it is not surprising that more and more doctors are refusing to accept new Medicare patients. In certain areas of the country, this problem is becoming increasingly serious. While the House bill contains some improvements in the current regulatory environment, only a major structural change will address the roots of these problems.
If Medicare remains unchanged, the baby boomers--the first of whom will join the program in just eight years--will find fewer doctors willing to treat them and a declining standard of care. If Congress fails to act or insists on bad policy, this lack of leadership will engender a genuine crisis of health care delivery for the nation's seniors.
CONCLUSION
Many Members of Congress firmly believe that Medicare should include a universal drug entitlement. Many also believe that liberal seniors' lobbies and organizations faithfully represent the legitimate interests of their members and constituents. They also believed the very same things when they enacted, with huge margins, the Medicare Catastrophic Coverage Act of 1988.
Notwithstanding the politically appealing and superficial rhetoric of universal drug coverage, it is the quality of the policy that will determine its reception among seniors and taxpayers alike. Based on the details of the Senate and House drug provisions, and the incentives and dynamics they are certain to set in motion, it is likely that retirees will not be thanking their representatives for the new Medicare drug entitlement. Now, as in 1988, the danger for Congress is that if it legislates in haste, it could end up repenting at leisure.
If Congress wants to avoid the kind of retiree backlash that occurred in response to the 1988 Medicare Catastrophic Coverage Act, it should scrap the drug provisions in both the House and Senate bills and go back to the 1999 recommendations of the majority of the membership of the National Bipartisan Commission on the Future of Medicare and provide Medicare beneficiaries with a choice between traditional Medicare as it exists today and new, private plans offering comprehensive, integrated benefits including outpatient prescription drug coverage.
The goal of true Medicare reform is to help tomorrow's retirees escape the growing problems that beset the current Medicare program--problems that are rooted in the absence of integrated, quality care. Congress should instead give retirees the option of choosing between the existing Medicare system and a set of new, private plans with comprehensive drug coverage subsidized by the government.
Only by covering outpatient prescription drugs through an integrated, flexible package of privately delivered health care benefits can Medicare realize the tremendous potential of modern pharmaceuticals both to reduce other health care costs and to improve the quality of health outcomes and the lives of America's current and future retirees.
Edmund F. Haislmaier is a Visiting Research Fellow in the Center for Health Policy Studies at the Heritage Foundation.

