Ocnus.Net
McCain’s Health-Care Muddle
By Trudy Lieberman, CJR 1/5/08
May 2, 2008 - 2:28:36 PM
John McCain finally came forth
this week with what his campaign dubbed a major policy speech, laying out his
To Do list for health care reform. We at CJR have been asking a lot
about his plans lately, which up to this point had raised more questions than
answers. Tuesday’s address wasn’t much more illuminating. In fact, in some
respects, it was utterly confusing. The Straight Talk Express took a circuitous
route, and the press did not clear things up.
Let’s start with McCain’s
overarching reform—altering the tax code to begin weaning the public off of
employer-provided health coverage, currently the bedrock of the U.S. health
insurance system. His plan would give workers the option of leaving their
employers’ plans and getting a federal tax credit—$2500 for individuals and
$5000 for families—to buy their own insurance in the commercial market. Leaving
aside the merits of a plan that could eventually lead to the demise of our
employer-based system, a question: How would McCain pay for that tax credit?
Now here comes the confusion. The AP ran a somewhat muddled
story Tuesday that
said:
To pay for the tax credit, McCain would eliminate the tax
exemption for people whose employers pay a portion of their coverage, raising
an estimated $3.6 trillion in revenues, [McCain adviser] Holtz-Eakin said.
Companies that provide coverage to workers still would get tax breaks. McCain
would also cut costs by limiting health care lawsuits.
By that account—read our lips!—
McCain means that if your boss pays for part of your health insurance, you will
begin to pay taxes on some part of it, the way people pay taxes on
employer-provided life insurance already. Apparently, the insurance would be
counted as income subject to income taxes.
Meanwhile, would employers—who
now can deduct health-insurance costs as a business expense—still get to do
that, as the AP reported? Or not, as
The New York Times suggested
yesterday. The
Times
reported
that Holtz-Eakin said the government would save that $3.6 trillion over the
next decade by eliminating the tax break that currently goes to encourage
employer-based health coverage. That sounds like eliminating the the tax break
that employers currently get.
But did Holtz-Eakin mean the
break to employers, employees, or both? It wasn’t really clear to the casual
reader. Thursday’s
Times
reported that
McCain proposed eliminating the exclusion of health benefits from taxable
income for workers. So maybe that’s it. But to get further clarity, we called the
McCain campaign press office (three times). No one called us back. We looked at
McCain’s speech, posted on his Web site. No help there—gobbledygook to most
people. Here’s what it said about the tax breaks:
Under current law, the federal government gives a tax
benefit when employers provide health-insurance coverage to American workers
and their families. This benefit doesn’t cover the total cost of the health
plan, and in reality each worker and family absorbs the rest of the cost in
lower wages and diminished benefits. But it provides essential support for
insurance coverage. Many workers are perfectly content with this arrangement,
and under my reform plan they would be able to keep that coverage. Their
employer-provided health plans would be largely untouched and unchanged.
It’s a fair bet that Americans
interested in the candidates’ health proposals are thoroughly confused. Many
outlets, like
The Houston Chronicle, picked up the AP
story, which was little
help. And get this—On Tuesday, McCain’s own Web site ran a story under the
by-line of David Jackson of
USAToday, calling it an “article excerpt.”
The excerpt, however, contained the same paragraph that was in the AP story.
The important thing to know
about McCain’s plan at the moment is that either way—by making employees pay
taxes on employer-provided coverage or by no longer allowing employers to
deduct health insurance as a business expense, or by doing both—it’s the
proverbial nose under the camel’s tent. It’s the beginning of the end of health
insurance as we know it, so what he proposes as a replacement should be very
carefully reported and considered. In McCain’s plan, under the banner of
consumer choice, everyone will eventually need to find insurance on their own
in the private market. In his speech, McCain himself said: “Millions of
Americans would be making their own health-care choices again.”
This reminds me a lot of what’s
happening to Medicare. The push to entice beneficiaries to buy certain kinds of
private-market policies and opt out of traditional Medicare is a wedge that
begins to privatize the program. Encouraging people to opt out of their
employer health coverage does the same thing—it makes people fly solo when it
comes to their health insurance. Is that what American workers want?
The tax part of McCain’s health
proposal is radical, far more radical than his rivals’ plans. Most of his other
proposals are less extreme. Some, in fact, have been tried before, and the
press should take a look at the results. The media need to begin asking the
hard questions, and soon. Stay tuned. We’ll work through some of those
questions next week.
Source: Ocnus.net 2008