Health insurance for most non-elderly Americans is purchased with funds from three sources: an employer contribution, an employee contribution, and a government tax subsidy.
Presumptive Republican presidential nominee Sen. John McCain's (R-AZ) health plan is based on the idea the first two contributions should be determined by individual choice and competition in the marketplace. The government's contribution would be the same for everyone--$2,500 for every adult, and $5,000 for every family.
Problems with Current System
Including state and local government, tax subsidies for private health insurance exceed $200 billion a year. The distribution of these dollars is arbitrary, unfair, and wasteful:
Example: An upper-income family living in a high-cost, high-tax city can realize an annual subsidy of $10,000 or more, while a low-income family living in a low-cost, low-tax city can receive a subsidy of $750 or less.
Example: A $10,000 health plan purchased by an employer for a family in a 50 percent tax bracket gets $5,000 of tax relief. The same plan for a family in a 15 percent bracket gets $1,500 of tax relief.
Example: Some companies have generous, first-dollar coverage for executives and their families (all subsidized through the tax code), while rank-and-file workers have deductibles, co-payments, and a more limited range of benefits.
Burdens on Individuals
The current system lays special burdens on several different categories of people.
Four of every 10 employers do not offer health insurance to their employees. When these workers purchase insurance on their own, they must pay with after-tax dollars. For a worker facing a 15.3 percent (FICA) payroll tax and a 15 percent income tax rate, the after-tax cost is almost 50 percent more than for employer-provided insurance.
About one in every five workers is part-time. Many employers do not offer these workers health insurance, and federal law makes it difficult, if not impossible, for employers to give them a choice between wages and health insurance. If these workers buy insurance on their own, they must do so with after-tax dollars.
The self-employed are now able to deduct health insurance costs on their income tax returns, but unlike other workers they get no relief from the 15.3 percent payroll tax. For many, the payroll tax bite is larger than the income tax.
Because women move into and out of the labor market more frequently than men, are more likely to work part-time, and are increasingly self-employed, they are more likely to have to purchase insurance on their own.
Advantages of Tax Credit
John McCain's proposed health care policy reforms would address all of these problems.
Refundable, Advanceable, Portable
The McCain plan not only offers all Americans the same tax relief, it does so in a way that makes it as easy as possible for people to acquire insurance.
John C. Goodman (john.goodman@ncpa.org) is president of the National Center for Policy Analysis. His health care blog is at http://www.john-goodman-blog.com/.