The State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) is up for
extension, and Congress threatens to more than double the program,
to be financed in part by higher taxes. This would raises taxes
even further above the modern historical average, add even more
spending to the federal government's already unaffordable health
care obligations, and take another risky step toward a
government-run health care system.
A better strategy to broaden health care coverage for kids is to
rationalize the federal tax treatment of health insurance in two
integrated steps:
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First, cap the amount of health insurance-related tax relief at
some generous, but fixed, amount. This would reduce the incentive
that currently exists to overinsure, either by overextending health
care coverage or by purchasing health insurance policies with
minimal deductibles and co-pays.
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Second, extend income and payroll tax relief to all individuals
and families who purchase health insurance irrespective of whether
they purchase it on their own or through their employers.
Accomplished through a tax deduction or, preferably, a refundable
tax credit or related mechanism, this policy would rapidly expand
access to private health care coverage and encourage the emergence
of a robust and consumer-friendly system of private health
insurance.
Though the refundable credit and similar proposals have their
shortcomings, they can achieve the same objectives as an SCHIP
expansion without the drawbacks of increased spending and taxes and
the movement toward a government-run health care system.
A Step Toward Government Control
SCHIP was created to provide health insurance to children of
families whose earnings were too high to qualify for Medicaid but
below 200 percent of the federal poverty level. Like Medicaid, it
is jointly funded by the federal and state governments. Since its
creation a decade ago, SCHIP has been a battleground between those
favoring private health insurance and those favoring an expansion
of government control over the health care system.
Having failed to achieve the big victory for government-run
health care with the collapse of the Clinton health care plan in
1994, President Clinton and his congressional allies focused on
images of poor children without health insurance to regain the
initiative and to achieve--incrementally and through different
means--the same end of increased government control over health
care financing and delivery.
Many states have expanded SCHIP to cover children in families
with increasingly higher incomes and, in some cases, to cover the
parents of the children. With SCHIP up for reauthorization,
Congress is threatening to more than double the size of the
program. Under the Senate Finance Committee's bill, sponsored by
Senators Max Baucus (D-MO) and Chuck Grassley (R-IA), children in
families with incomes of approximately $62,000 (family of four)
would qualify for SCHIP coverage; apparently, children in some
families with incomes up to $82,600 would also qualify. Promoting a
new health care entitlement for the upper-middle class would be a
major step toward government-run health insurance for everyone.
Tax Policy: A Better Alternative Than
SCHIP Expansion
A better alternative for expanding health care coverage is
extending favorable tax treatment for private health coverage.
There are numerous options available to policymakers, each with
strengths and weaknesses, all of which center on some kind of
health insurance tax deduction or credit.
Tax deductions are common under an income tax because some
expenses are deducted from gross income to determine taxable
income. The calculated amount of taxable income is then multiplied
by a tax rate to determine the amount of tax owed. Exclusions and
exemptions, like deductions, likewise reduce taxable income, but
they typically do not reflect the principle of recognizing expenses
incurred to generate income. Under current law, for example,
businesses may deduct the costs of the insurance they provide their
employees as a normal business expense, while as a matter of health
policy their employees are allowed to exclude the costs of their
health insurance policy from their own taxable income.
In contrast to deductions, tax credits reduce the amount of tax
owed rather than the amount of taxable income. Tax credits can be a
flat rate, as with the child tax credit, or they can vary with
income. One perceived advantage of flat tax credits is that (for
most eligible taxpayers) a flat tax credit provides a fixed amount
of tax relief, while the amount of tax relief from a deduction
increases with the taxpayer's income due to the progressivity of
the federal income tax system.
A problem arises when using the tax code for non-tax policy
purposes in that many U.S. residents receive little or none of the
tax benefit because they pay little or no income tax. The tax code
remains a viable policy tool, however, either by making tax credits
refundable--which means the tax filer can receive the full value of
the credit even if he or she owes no income tax--or by combining a
tax credit for taxpayers with a voucher for low-income
residents.
In the case of a refundable credit, for example, suppose that a
taxpayer owes $400 in income tax and qualifies for a $1,000 tax
credit. If the credit is non-refundable, then the taxpayer can use
$400 of the $1,000 credit to eliminate his tax liability but is
unable to use the remaining $600 of the credit. If the credit is
refundable, however, the taxpayer can eliminate his tax liability
and also receive a check from the Treasury for the remainder of the
credit--$600 in this example.
Despite their advantages, refundable credits also have some
major shortcomings. First, there is great danger to our democracy
when any but the poorest residents pay no income tax whatsoever.
The income tax is the primary means by which U.S. residents
contribute to the financing of the federal government, sharing the
burden of the cost for all that government does. The tax collected
from lower-income residents should be commensurately modest, but
they should be asked to contribute at least some minimal amount to
the operations of the government for the services they receive.
These concerns are magnified when significant numbers of residents
not only pay no income tax, but are net beneficiaries of the tax
system.
A second major shortcoming arises when refundable tax credits
transform the income tax from a means of collecting revenue into an
administrative mechanism for distributing government subsidies to
targeted individuals. Refundable tax credits complicate an already
overly complicated tax code and are often subject to serious abuse
and fraud, such as with the Earned-Income Tax Credit today. Any
reforms to the tax treatment of private health insurance should
ensure that the policy is administrable by the tax service and
easily understood by the taxpayer, and this is especially so for
refundable tax credits.
Third, refundable tax credits give rise to "tax spending,"
obscuring the true level of total federal spending. The bulk of
federal spending is shown explicitly in the federal budget, but a
significant portion occurs out of sight through the income
tax-based welfare system. Tax spending, therefore, hides the true
size of government in terms of the programs administered, the
resources claimed, the lives touched, and the markets distorted.
One option policymakers could consider to address this issue is to
marry the non-refundable portion of the tax credit with
alternatives that would appear in the budget, such as some form of
voucher for non-tax-paying residents that is funded by redirecting
funds from existing spending programs.
To be clear, a capped health care deduction does not represent
good tax policy, and neither do a tax exclusion nor a refundable
credit; each would be yet another instance of using the tax system
for non-tax policy purposes. But this has to be weighed against the
other goals involved. The income tax is used today to address a
long list of non-tax-related policies because the tax code allows
these policies to be pursued without creating new, expensive,
cumbersome government bureaucracies. Fortunately--and sometimes
unfortunately--the income tax system is a relatively cost-effective
mechanism for collecting revenues as well as for encouraging
certain behaviors, discouraging others, and sometimes for
distributing cash support payments. Relative to current law,
reforming the tax treatment of health insurance as described here
would arguably be a modest step toward better tax policy--and a
major step toward better health care policy.
Refundable Credits for Health
Insurance Expansion
As a general rule, refundable tax credits should only be adopted
to achieve extraordinary policy goals. Given the problems in our
health care delivery and financing systems, and given the threat of
government-run health insurance, the expansion of private health
insurance coverage for individuals and families qualifies as an
extraordinary policy goal.
America's health care system suffers from a long list of
ailments, real and perceived, many of which can be directly traced
to government intervention in the health insurance and health care
services markets. One problem is that health care prices continue
to grow significantly faster than other prices in the economy. In
recent years, health care prices have generally risen twice as fast
as other consumer prices.
Many argue that a second problem is the approximately 45 million
Americans who lack primary health insurance coverage for at least
some part of each year.[1] Many of the uninsured do not receive
coverage from their employers and lack the income to purchase
health insurance on their own. Many are uninsured for only part of
the year, and some simply choose not to buy insurance even though
they could afford it.
A third problem is that the federal government may someday
attempt to address the first two problems by taking over the whole
health care financing system. The proposed SCHIP expansion into the
middle class is a big step in this direction.
The best tax policy solution would be to eliminate all
deductions, exclusions, and credits associated with purchasing
health insurance in return for lower income tax rates. In many
respects, this would also be the best health policy because
patients would gain greater control over--and sensitivity to--their
health care decisions without tax policy distorting those
decisions. This ideal solution, however, is simply not on the
political horizon and, so, provides no practical alternative either
to SCHIP as it operates today or to proposals for SCHIP
expansion.
Theoretically, a second best solution--still far preferable to a
creeping expansion of government control over health care--would be
to allow every taxpayer a tax benefit for the purchase of health
insurance. This benefit would be available against income tax, and
possibly against payroll tax as well--similar to the current
exclusion for employer-sponsored health insurance. The tax benefit
would be available to any individual or family purchasing at least
a basic health insurance policy. The amount of the benefit should
be fixed each year, it should not depend on the income of the
policyholder, and it should not depend on the amount of the
insurance policy's premiums to avoid creating an adverse incentive
to purchase more expensive insurance.
Such a tax benefit is, in effect, the substance of the
President's health care proposal. Any family purchasing a basic
health care policy would qualify for a $15,000 standard deduction
for health insurance against their income and payroll tax
liabilities. According to the Congressional Budget Office, this
policy would reduce the number of uninsured in America by about 6.8
million.[2] The Lewin Group, a prominent consultancy,
estimated that the President's plan would reduce the number of
uninsured by 9.2 million. [3]
A shortcoming of proposals like the President's is that many of
the uninsured are poor and pay little or no income tax or payroll
tax, and consequently would receive little or no benefit from a
health insurance tax deduction. They would, however, receive the
full benefit, the full incentive, and the full financial support to
purchase health insurance if they were eligible for a refundable
tax credit. According to one analysis, a refundable tax credit
would generate "substantially more [health insurance] coverage
because low-income families would have a greater incentive to get
coverage while higher-income families would likely still retain
their coverage."[4]
One major advantage of the tax-based approach to expanding
health care coverage is that it can be achieved through reforms to
existing tax and spending programs, rather than by expanding the
size of government through more spending and more taxation. Some
observers might question whether replacing the current exclusion
for employer-sponsored health care with a refundable tax credit is
also a tax increase and a spending increase. The source of the
concern is the refundable portion of the credit, which many regard
as a spending increase.
A possible means of addressing this concern would be, in part,
to cap and eventually eliminate the employer-sponsored health
exclusion in favor of a non-refundable tax credit to individuals
and families who pay income tax, and to set the credit rate so
there is no net change in overall tax receipts. By construction,
this policy is revenue-neutral.
For individuals and families who pay no income tax, the second
part of the solution would be to create a mechanism such as a
voucher. Such a policy would appear explicitly in the budget as a
spending item, and the cost should be offset with reductions in
SCHIP spending or other federal health spending. Furthermore, since
the combined tax credit/voucher system would significantly reduce
the number of uninsured according to the estimates noted above,
federal health care spending pressures should abate naturally. By
construction, such a policy would then be budget-neutral on both
the tax and spending sides of the ledger.
Conclusion
In general, the tax code should be used to raise revenue, not as
a convenient mechanism for diverting private resources and
channeling private behavior. The federal government should also
avoid expanding the ranks of those who pay no income tax or who are
net beneficiaries of the income tax system. The activities of the
federal government are not free, and U.S. residents should not be
led to believe otherwise by receiving those services at no
perceptible cost.
However, Congress is at a pivotal moment in the health care
debate and must decide whether it will expand private health
insurance options or grow government. If Congress chooses to expand
private options for individuals and families, then it must, of
necessity, address tax policy.
Although in general the tax code should be used only to raise
revenue, health care is already an exception to the rule, and that
exception is unlikely to be erased any time soon. Consequently,
Congress should look to sensible, revenue-neutral or tax-reducing
policies to expand private health insurance options.
A capped, universally available refundable health insurance tax
credit or credit/voucher combination policy offers advantages that,
on balance, make them superior to a standard deduction for health
insurance and far superior to current law. Chief among those
advantages is its large impact among lower-income residents who
today lack health insurance. Rapidly building up the ranks of the
privately insured and the depth of the individual health insurance
market would act as a vital bulwark against the ever-present danger
of government-run health insurance. Despite their shortcomings, a
refundable tax credit or credit/voucher policy offer the best means
of advancing private health insurance and fending off
government-run health care.
JD Foster, Ph.D., is Norman B.
Ture Senior Fellow in the Economics of Fiscal Policy in the Thomas
A. Roe Institute for Economic Policy Studies at The Heritage
Foundation.