home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=94TT0626>
- <title>
- May 16, 1994: Health Care:This May Hurt a Bit
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- May 16, 1994 "There are no devils...":Rwanda
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- HEALTH CARE, Page 50
- This May Hurt a Bit
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Congress begins to ask why the U.S. subsidizes insurance coverage
- for those at the top of the heap
- </p>
- <p>By Dan Goodgame--With reporting by Laurence I. Barrett and Dick Thompson/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Back in the early, innocent days of Hillary Rodham Clinton's
- health-care task force, several members urged that the group
- look not only at what the Federal Government should do to control
- costs and extend health coverage to the uninsured but also at
- what it should stop doing. Their most notable suggestion: Washington
- might limit the tax exemption for employer-purchased health
- insurance, which costs the Treasury $74 billion a year and mainly
- works to subsidize generous health plans for the best-paid Americans.
- The exemption, they argued, fuels overspending on health care
- and helps drive the cost of insurance beyond the reach of many
- low-income workers and small businesses. "Almost everyone agreed,"
- says a senior White House official, "that it would be good policy
- to reform the tax subsidy."
- </p>
- <p> Good policy, but not good politics--especially not by the
- lights of labor-union members, who have used the tax subsidy
- to negotiate some of the most expensive health benefits in America.
- When union bosses, led by AFL-CIO president Lane Kirkland, got
- wind that the White House was even discussing limits on the
- tax subsidy for health insurance, they met privately with Mrs.
- Clinton and warned her that labor's support for health reform--deemed essential by the Democrats--was at risk. The First
- Lady then sent word to her erstwhile reformers: There's no sense
- even talking about the tax subsidy. The issue has thus become
- known as the "third rail" of health-care politics--as deadly
- as a high-voltage train track.
- </p>
- <p> Now, however, as Congress seeks new ways to finance health coverage
- for the uninsured, the tax subsidy is losing its untouchable
- status, especially among members of the powerful Senate Finance
- Committee, who are working to draft a bipartisan alternative
- to the Clinton health plan. Two key Democrats, David Boren of
- Oklahoma and Bob Kerrey of Nebraska, last week endorsed a health-reform
- bill sponsored by Republican Senator John Chafee of Rhode Island
- that would limit the tax subsidy and use the saving to help
- the working poor buy health insurance.
- </p>
- <p> Senator Bob Packwood, the Oregon Republican, has long opposed
- limits on the tax subsidy but now says, "My mind is open." The
- rising cost of health care, he says, makes him wonder "whether
- we have encouraged, because of the tax code, too much health
- coverage...Cadillac coverage when we ought to be aiming
- for Chevrolet coverage." Senator Tom Daschle, the South Dakota
- Democrat, acknowledged that "it's safe to say that we won't
- allow a sky's-the-limit tax exclusion." And a top adviser to
- President Clinton predicted "a cap on the tax subsidy for upper-income
- people." Union leaders are on the alert. "We thought we had
- beaten this idea of taxing benefits, but now it's back again,"
- said Gerald McEntee, president of the American Federation of
- State, County and Municipal Employees.
- </p>
- <p> Union members defend the tax subsidy on the ground that in many
- cases they made wage concessions in return for better health
- benefits. However, their coverage often allows them to pay little
- toward their health-care bills and insulates them from the cost
- of their treatment choices. The Clinton plan provides incentives
- to most Americans to reduce health spending but not to those
- covered under union contracts, who are exempted for 10 years.
- </p>
- <p> The tax subsidy is a product of a different era. America's health-care
- system, in which workers get health insurance mainly through
- employers, began to evolve during World War II, when labor was
- scarce and wages were controlled. Employers started to compete
- for workers by offering health insurance, which Washington deemed
- exempt from taxes. That didn't matter much when the average
- family paid about $60 a year in federal taxes, but as taxes
- rose during the 1970s and '80s, workers and employers faced
- a strong incentive to substitute tax-free health benefits for
- taxable wages. This pushed up the price of health care and of
- the tax subsidy.
- </p>
- <p> Like most tax breaks, the one for health insurance is highly
- regressive: 60% of the $74 billion subsidy flows to the highest-paid
- 20% of Americans. Whereas the average family saves about $800
- a year in taxes, those earning between $100,000 and $200,000
- save $1,710--and the 35 million Americans with no insurance
- get no subsidy at all.
- </p>
- <p> To address this inequity, the Chafee plan would limit the tax
- subsidy to the value of the "average" health policy in a region
- and would use the saving to subsidize insurance for those who
- now can't afford it. Clinton adviser George Stephanopoulos warns,
- however, that "taxing health benefits goes to the heart of people's
- fears that health-care reform might take away what they already
- have." Many lawmakers therefore favor a tax subsidy whose impact
- is limited to those at the highest incomes: say, $80,000 and
- above.
- </p>
- <p> Even at that level, however, some high-paid union members with
- working spouses would be hit. It is perhaps a measure of organized
- labor's success--at least for the shrunken ranks of its members--that David Saltz, an AFL-CIO spokesman, protests that "just
- because something hurts upper-income people, that doesn't make
- it progressive."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-