1 / 10

Health Reform: Déjà Vu All Over Again? Health Care Forecast Conference

Health Reform: Déjà Vu All Over Again? Health Care Forecast Conference University of California, Irvine February 25, 2010. And speaking of vu…. Growing problem of obesity. legislative. House 7/14 – TriComm – 1,018 pages 10/29 – HR 3962 – 1,990 pages 11/7 – Engrossed bill – 2,016 pages

Download Presentation

Health Reform: Déjà Vu All Over Again? Health Care Forecast Conference

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Health Reform: Déjà Vu All Over Again? Health Care Forecast Conference University of California, Irvine February 25, 2010

  2. And speaking of vu…

  3. Growing problem of obesity legislative • House • 7/14 – TriComm – 1,018 pages • 10/29 – HR 3962 – 1,990 pages • 11/7 – Engrossed bill – 2,016 pages • Senate • 6/9 – HELP – 615 pages • 10/19 – SFC – 1,502 pages • 11/18 – Reid HR 3590 – 2,074 pages • 12/24 – Engrossed bill – 2,409 pages

  4. So many pages, so little time • Perfectibility of regulation— if not of man • Attempt to solve every conceivable problem • Solution Problem Solution … • But the bills are incomplete Scores of new advisory and regulatory bodies Obama plan continues this strategy

  5. Conflicting policy objectives • Expand insurance coverage—cut the deficit • Expand benefits—lower costs • Allow everyone to keep what they have—change what insurance is required to do • Promote choice—keep most people in ESI • Lower premiums—eliminate underwriting • Cut Medicare payments—maintain program benefits • Promote economic growth—tax business

  6. Building blocks of House, Senate bills • Health insurance exchange • Insurance regulation • Mandates • Subsidies • Medicare cuts • Tax increases • Earmarks

  7. Broad similarities • Big money • Coverage: House $891 B, Senate $871 B • Medicare cuts: H $453 B, S $438 B • Taxes1: H $806 B, S $638 B • Big regulation • Mandates – individual and employer • Guaranteed issue, no pre-ex, no rescissions, rating bands, minimum benefit package, medical loss ratio • Insurance exchanges • Tax credits, Medicaid expansion • “Nice” ideas: ACOs, medical home, bundled payment, prevention, CER, quality measures, fraud/abuse, FOBs, etc. 1Excludes tax credits which reduce net revenue: H $25 B, S $140 B

  8. Major disagreements • Millionaire’s tax vs. Cadillac tax • H: 5.4% surcharge, income>$1 M (joint) • $460.5 B • S: 40% excise tax, coverage>$8,500/$23,000 • $148.9 B, supplemented by add’l 0.9% HI payroll tax on wages>$250,000 (joint) ($86.8 B), insurer fee ($59.6 B), Pharma fee ($22.2 B), others • National vs. state-level insurance exchange • Public option vs. none • Permanent fix, SGR vs. none • H: $209 B—but hidden in separate bill • Part D donut hole phase-out vs. one-time fill-in • H: Rx discount + duals rebate; S: Discount + $500 reduction

  9. Other differences

  10. Why the stalemate? The Republicans are our opposition. The Senate is our enemy. Rep. Anthony Weiner (D-N.Y.), January 27 after SOTU

More Related