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Overview

Health Care Reform Tax, Budget, and Economic Implications Matt Dolan Director Federal Policy Group A Practice of Clark & Wamberg Independent Insurance Agents of Iowa September 23, 2010 West Des Moines, Iowa. Overview. The Fiscal Context of Health Care Reform

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Overview

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  1. Health Care ReformTax, Budget, and Economic ImplicationsMatt DolanDirectorFederal Policy GroupA Practice of Clark & WambergIndependent Insurance Agents of IowaSeptember 23, 2010West Des Moines, Iowa

  2. Overview • The Fiscal Context of Health Care Reform • Health Care Reform: Running the Numbers • Impact of Health Care Reform • Impact on the Economy: “Bending the Cost Curve?”: Effect of Health Care Reform on Health Care Spending as a Percentage of GDP • Impact on Government Deficits: Aggregate Government Health Care Spending and Revenue Projections • Impact on Medicare: Medicare Costs, Revenues, and Solvency

  3. Fiscal Context of Health Care Reform

  4. Fiscal Context of Health Care Reform

  5. Fiscal Context of Health Care Reform

  6. Fiscal Context of Health Care Reform

  7. Fiscal Context of Health Care Reform

  8. Fiscal Context of Health Care Reform

  9. Fiscal Context of Health Care Reform

  10. Fiscal Context of Health Care Reform

  11. Fiscal Context of Health Care Reform Historical Spending Average = 20.3% Spending FY 2011 Obama Budget Historical Tax Average = 18% Taxes

  12. Fiscal Context of Health Care Reform (Budget Categories as Percentage of GDP) * Based on CBO’s Long-Term Alternative Fiscal Scenario

  13. Current Policy World War II 2010 Historic Trend

  14. Fiscal Context of Health Care Reform

  15. Fiscal Context of Health Care Reform

  16. States in Fiscal Crisis, Too

  17. Health Care Reform: Running the Numbers “We have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it.” Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA), March 9, 2010

  18. Now that health care reform has passed… So…what is in it? • What does it do? • How much does it cost? • Where does the money come from?

  19. What does it do? • Expand health insurance coverage • 83% of U.S. citizens have health insurance • 17% do not • By 2019, Health Care Reform will raise the percentage of citizens with health insurance to 94% • An estimated 23.9 million people will still have no insurance • An estimated 20.2 million more people will be on Medicaid due to higher eligibility limits • An estimated 14.5 millionmore peoplewill have private health insurance

  20. What does it do? • Implement insurance reforms • Establish a federal long term care insurance program, the “Community Living Assistance Services and Supports Act” (“CLASS Act”) • “Bend the cost curve” (?)

  21. What does it cost? Disclaimer #1: Health care cost projections are notoriously difficult, and government estimates may prove dramatically off: • Estimated 1990 cost of Medicare (adjusted for inflation) when begun in 1966: $12 billion • Actual 1990 cost of Medicare: $107 billion Disclaimer #2: Cost projections must assume that laws are implemented as written, no matter how unlikely that may be.

  22. What does it cost? The total cost properly includes: • Costs to federal government • Costs to the state governments (increased Medicaid burden) • Costs to the private sector

  23. What does it cost? • The Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services Actuary (“CMMS”) estimates that, by 2019, the expanded coverage provisions of Health Care Reform alone will cost the Federal Government$197 billion per year. The Congressional Budget Office (“CBO”) estimates the coverage costs at $214 billionper year by 2019. • CMMS estimates that, by 2019, Health Care Reform will add$88.8 billion to total health care spending (public and private) per year. • Estimates assume projected savings in Medicare and provider reimbursements are achieved. CMMS estimates that Medicare savings, if implemented, would alone reduce national health expenditures by 2.4%, or $113 billion, in 2019. However, CMMS characterizes projected savings as “unrealistic” and “unsustainable”.

  24. Where does the money come from? NOT from eliminating fraud and abuse [W]e've estimated that most of this plan can be paid for by finding savings within the existing health care system, a system that is currently full of waste and abuse…. The only thing this plan would eliminate is the hundreds of billions of dollars in waste and fraud.” President Obama, September 9, 2009 CBO projects no savings from “Health Care Fraud Enforcement” for Medicare, Medicaid, and CHIP programs of Health Care Reform CBO, March 20, 2010 CMMS estimates that Health Care Reform provisions relating to “Fight waste, fraud, and abuse” would reduce Medicare outlays from 2010-2021 by a total of $4.9 billion, or approximately .05%. CMMS 2010

  25. Where does the money come from? • Tax Increases • Annual additional tax revenues by 2019: $89 billion • High cost plan excise tax: $20 billion • Additional HI tax on individuals above $200,000 and couples above $250,000 (.9% on earned income and 2.8% on capital gains, dividends, and interest): $39 billion • Tax on health insurers: $12 billion • Miscellaneous (including penalties on employers and uninsured individuals): $18 billion

  26. Where does the money come from? • Medicare cost reductions • Annual Medicare savings by 2019: $113 billion • Total Medicare savings 2010-2019: $575 billion • “Reduce Part A and Part B payment levels” and “adjust future ‘market basket’ payment updates”: $233 billion in projected savings • “Reduce Medicare Advantage payment benchmarks”: $145 billion in projected savings • “Implement Medicare Improvement Fund”: $27 billion in projected savings • “Implement Payment Advisory Board”: $24 billion in projected savings • Medicare costs do not include physician payment increases passed by Congress since enactment of Health Care Reform—increases almost certain to be extended at an estimated cost of $245 billion over 10 years

  27. However… Analyses from the CMMS Actuary conclude such savings are “unrealistic” [W]hile the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, as amended, makes important changes to the Medicare program and substantially improves its financial outlook, there is a strong likelihood that certain of these changes will not be viable in the long range.… Without major changes in health care delivery systems, the prices paid by Medicare for health services are very likely to fall increasingly short of the costs of providing these services. By the end of the long-range projection period, Medicare prices for hospital, skilled nursing facility, home health, hospice, ambulatory surgical center, diagnostic laboratory, and many other services would be less than half of their level under the prior law…. For these reasons, the financial projections shown in this report for Medicare do not represent a reasonable expectation for actual program operations in either the short range (as a result of the unsustainable reductions in physician payment rates) or the long range (because of the strong likelihood that the statutory reductions in price updates for most categories of Medicare provider services will not be viable). CMMS Actuary, 2010 Medicare Trustees Report

  28. How unrealistic are the projected Medicare savings? • The 2010 Medicare Trustees Report projects long term Medicare expenditures to stay below 6 percent until 2050 and plateau at slightly over 6 percent of GDP thereafter. • The Medicare Actuary released an “Alternative Scenario” “based on more sustainable assumptions for physician and other Medicare price updates” that projects Medicare expenditures to reach 6 percent by 2030, 20 years earlier, and to continue to rise in later decades, reaching about 11 percent by 2080.

  29. CLASS Program (Long-Term Care Insurance) • CMMS Actuary “estimate[s] a net Federal savings for the CLASS Act program of $38 billion during the first nine years of operations—the first 5 of which are prior to the commencement of benefit payments.” • “[I]n 2025 and later, projected benefits exceed premium revenues, resulting in a net Federal cost in the longer term.” • “[T]here is a very serious risk that the problem of adverse selection will make the CLASS program unsustainable.”

  30. Impact of Health Care Reform • Impact of Health Care Reform on the Economy: “Bending the Cost Curve?” • Impact of Health Care Reform on Federal Budget Deficit • Impact of Health Care Reform on Medicare Costs, Revenues, and Solvency

  31. Bending the Cost Curve? The Goal… “I think it's important for us to bend the cost curve, separate and apart from coverage issues, just because the system we have right now is unsustainable and hugely inefficient and uncompetitive.” President Obama, July 22, 2009 The Reality… CMMS estimates that Health Care Reform will “bend the cost curve” upslightly if projected savings are achieved, and up dramatically if they are not. CMMS National Health Expenditure Estimates, April 2010; September 2010) “Bending the cost curve on health care is hard to do….As a consequence of us getting 30 million additional people health care, at the margins that's going to increase our costs—we knew that.” President Obama, September 10, 2010

  32. Impact of Health Care Reform on Federal Budget Deficit “I will not sign a plan that adds one dime to our deficits -- either now or in the future.  (Applause.)  I will not sign it if it adds one dime to the deficit, now or in the future, period.”  President Obama, Address to Joint Session of Congress, September 9, 2010

  33. Impact of Health Care Reform on Federal Budget Deficit In March 2010, immediately prior to final passage of Health Care Reform, CBO estimated that the legislation would reduce the deficit by $124 billion from 2010-2019. • CBO estimate assumed that the “unrealistic” projected savings will be realized. • $245 billion physician fee “doc fix” removed from legislation to be passed separately In May 2010, CBO identified $115 billion in costs not included in the prior estimate, and noted that figure did not include costs relating to “Explicit authorizations for a variety of grant and other program spending for which no specific funding levels are identified in the legislation.”

  34. Impact of Health Care Reform on Medicare The Headline:Medicare Solvency Extended… “[The Health Care Reform] changes are estimated to postpone the exhaustion of HI trust fund assets from 2017 under the prior law to 2029. - 2010 Medicare Trustees Report The Fine Print:That is, if we make “unrealistic” assumptions The annual report to Congress on the financial status of Medicare must be based on current law. In this report, the productivity adjustments are assumed to occur in all future years, as required by the Affordable Care Act. In addition, reductions in Medicare payment rates for physician services, totaling 30 percent over the next 3 years, are assumed to be implemented as required under current law, despite the virtual certainty that Congress will continue to override these latter reductions.” - 2010 Medicare Trustees Report The Spin:Victory for Seniors "We've made Medicare more solvent by going after waste, fraud and abuse -- not by changing seniors' guaranteed benefits.“ - President Obama, Aug. 9, 2010

  35. Evolving Justifications for Health Care Reform • Conceived on the Campaign Trailas a way to expand coverage • Sold to the Public as critical health insurance reforms • Presented to Congressas a deficit reduction package • Justified in retrospectas _______________?

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