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December 22, 2009 The House and Senate Health Care Bills: The Key
Differences WebMemo #2740 The giant House and Senate health care bills[1] reflect a common ideological foundation: a profound congressional faith in the efficacy and desirability of federal government
control over the financing and delivery of Americans' health care, ranging from federal control over health benefits to the
dramatic expansion of government coverage--notably Medicaid--for new classes of American citizens. Nonetheless, there
are consequential policy problems to be resolved. Before a final bill reaches the desk of the President, House and Senate
negotiators must iron out these differences and engage in further compromise and concessions. Six Key Differences 1.
The Nature and Scope of the Public Plan. Both President Obama and congressional liberals proposed a new government
run health plan (a "public option") to compete against private health insurance nationwide. To gain the support
of several key moderates, such as Senator Joseph Lieberman (I-CT), the Senate leadership dropped provisions to establish an
explicit public plan from the final version of their bill. Instead, they substituted a new set of "multi-state"
private health plans sponsored by the U.S. Office of Personnel Management that would compete against private health plans
in the state-based exchanges that are mandated by the Senate bill. In contrast, the House bill (H.R. 3962) includes
an explicit government-run health plan. Moreover, the House-passed public plan is already less "robust" than originally
proposed; thus, additional House concessions on the provision may be even more difficult.[2] Even public opinion, which is vaguely supportive of the idea of a public plan competing against private insurance, is moving
against the concept of the public plan.[3] 2. The Size and Reach of New Federal Taxes. Both the House and Senate bills would impose new taxes,
which will hit the middle class, thus breaking the President's repeated promise to not raise taxes on families earning under
$250,000. The Senate bill relies heavily on more than a dozen tax provisions, including a new excise tax on high cost
health care plans: a 40 percent excise tax on plans exceeding $8,500 for an individual and $23,000 for a family. The tax would
also apply to the private plans offered in the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program (FEHBP) and, according to the Congressional
Budget Office (CBO), yield $149 billion in new revenues over 10 years. The Senate bill also has a new federal premium
tax on all insurers, including those who cover seniors in the Medicare Advantage program and federal workers and retirees
in the FEHBP. There is general agreement that this new premium tax, as well as others, will be passed on to consumers through
higher premiums and health care costs. Financing for the House bill depends on a heavy new income tax targeted at "wealthy"
income taxpayers and small businesses. The House-passed bill would impose a 5.4 percent tax on individuals with incomes above
$500,000 and on families with incomes above $1 million, and would yield $461 billion in new revenues (according to CBO) over
10 years. As noted by analysts at The Heritage Foundation, the tax is structured in such a way that over time more and more
Americans will be hit by this tax, and small business owners would be particularly affected.[4] 3. The Scope of the Employer Mandate. Both the House and Senate bills impose mandates on employers
to offer government-approved health care coverage or pay a tax penalty. The Senate bill imposes a $750 penalty per worker
on employers of 50 or more who do not offer federally qualified coverage. Even if the employer does offer federally
qualified coverage, if a worker obtains the federal subsidy to buy coverage in the health insurance exchange, the employer
would have to pay an annual penalty of $3,000 for each worker who obtains a subsidy (up to a maximum of $750 times the total
number of full-time workers).[5] The House bill imposes a direct requirement on employers to offer federally qualified health care coverage to their
employees and pay a specified percentage for single and family premiums or pay a payroll tax of up to 8 percent. In trying
to recover from the recession, employers do not need yet another tax. Both the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the National Federation
of Independent Businesses have come out against the bills.[6] 4. The Penalties of an Individual Mandate. Both bills also impose a new legal requirement on individuals
to either buy federally approved health insurance or pay a tax penalty. Beginning in 2014, the Senate bill requires
individuals to purchase a government-approved plan or pay a penalty. By 2016, the annual penalty would amount to $750. The
tax penalty, indexed for inflation, would increase over time. Beginning in 2013, the House bill requires individuals
to pay a penalty of 2.5 percent of their income for not obtaining federally "acceptable" health care coverage. Those
with health insurance that does not meet the federal standards would still pay the tax penalty. Not surprisingly, many on
the Right and the Left oppose this mandate.[7] Ironically, both sides seem to agree that congressional action to coerce individuals to buy insurance is bad policy or just
plain wrong. 5. The Expansion of the Medicaid Entitlement. Both bills greatly expand eligibility for
Medicaid, the welfare program that provides health care services to the poor and the indigent. The Senate bill would
require states to expand their Medicaid programs to cover all Americans up to 133 percent of the federal poverty level (FPL),
or $29,326 for a family of four. The House bill would require states to expand eligibility for Medicaid to 150 percent FPL,
or $33,075 for a family of four. Such an expansion of Medicaid "crowds out" private coverage and faces resistance
by governors who are struggling with budget demands.[8] Moreover, any "sweetheart" deals to provide additional assistance to the states, like the one extended to Senator
Ben Nelson (D-NE), only shift the real cost from state taxpayers to federal taxpayers. 6. Taxpayer Funding for
Abortion. The President promised that there would be no federal taxpayer funding for abortion. In the House bill,
by virtue of the Stupak-Pitts amendment, there is a genuine firewall between federal funding and abortion coverage. In the
Senate bill, by virtue of the agreement between Senate Majority leader Harry Reid and Senator Nelson, there is no such firewall;
the bill allows federal taxpayer funding for abortion. For the pro-life advocates on both sides of the aisle, the Reid-Nelson
language falls far short of the House language. Rising Unpopularity Even if concessions and compromises
can be made between the Senate and House versions, public opinion is solidifying against the legislation. A recent Rasmussen
poll found that only 34 percent of voters say passing a health care bill is better than doing nothing.[9] This is on the heels of a CNN poll that found 61 percent opposed to the bill[10] and a NBC/Wall Street Journal poll that found that only 32 percent think the health care bills are a "good
idea."[11] With public opinion opposing the bills mounting, Americans can hope Congress will stop and enact true, bipartisan health
reform, reform that does not constitute a federal takeover of American health care. Nina Owcharenko is Senior Policy Analyst in the Center for Health Policy Studies and Robert E. Moffit, Ph.D., is Director of the Center for Health Policy Studies at The Heritage Foundation. |
[1]For a description of the House bill, see Staffs of the Center for Health Policy Studies and Center for Data Analysis, "A
Closer Look at The House Democrats' Health Care Bill," Heritage Foundation WebMemo No 2684, November 6, 2009,
at http://www.heritage.org/research/healthcare/ wm2684.cfm. For a description of the Senate bill, see Staffs of the Center for Health Policy Studies and the Center for Data Analysis,
"An Analysis of the Senate Democrats' Health Bill," Heritage Foundation Backgrounder No 2353, December
18, 2009, at http://www.heritage.org/research/healthcare /bg2353.cfm. [2]The original House version envisioned the public plan using Medicare payment rates, which are well below the rates paid to
doctors and hospitals in the private sector, to drive down costs and make its premiums less expensive than private health
plans. [6]See U.S. Chamber of Commerce, "Letter Opposing H.R. 3962, the Affordable Health Care for America Act," November
5, 2009, at http://www.uschamber.com/issues/letters/2009/091105hr3962.htm (December 22, 2009); U.S. Chamber of Commerce, "Key Vote Letter Opposing the Patient Protection and Affordable
Care Act," December 18, 2009, at http://chamberpost.typepad.com/files/091218_kv_hr3590 _patientprotectionandaffordablecareact_senate.pdf (December 22, 2009); National Federal of Independent Businesses, "NFIB Statement: Senate Health Bill," November
19, 2009, at http://www.nfib.com/issues-elections /issues-elections-item/cmsid/50237/ (December 21, 2009); National Federal of Independent Businesses, "Letter to House Opposing H.R. 3962," November
5, 2009, at http://www.nfib.com/issues-elections/issues-elections-item/ cmsid/50168/ (December 22, 2009). [8]Estimated Medicaid spending in the states for fiscal year 2009 increased by over 7 percent. See National Association of State
Budget Officers, "The Fiscal Survey of States: Fall 2009," December 2009, at http://www.nasbo.org/Publications/PDFs/fsfall2009.pdf (December 22, 2009).
Janury
6, 2010When Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) emerged from a closed-door meeting with top House Democratic leaders yesterday, the
press asked her about C-SPAN CEO Brian Lamb’s request that she permit cameras to televise the final health care negotiations
between the House and Senate. After Pelosi first demurred, a reporter reminded Pelosi about President Barack Obama’s
frequent promises to the American people throughout 2008 that he would ensure C-SPAN was allowed to televise exactly such
negotiations, to which Speaker Pelosi quipped: “There are a number of things he was for on the campaign trail.” Speaker Pelosi is right: President Obama’s
broken health care promises are legendary. According to reports, Speaker Pelosi wasn’t even referring to Obama’s
whopper from last month that he never campaigned on the public option. No, Speaker Pelosi is apparently most upset with Obama’s support for the Senate’s tax on high cost health plans, which she believes is a violation
of Obama’s promise not to raise taxes on the middle class. But really, President Obama’s current health care plan
breaks so many of his previous health care promises, there is no need for Pelosi to have to name just one. Here are just some
of the other major promises President Barack Obama has broken: Individual Mandate: There were not a
lot of actual policy fights in the 2008 Democratic Presidential primary, but one of the few major policy disagreements between
then-Sen. Hillary Clinton (D-NY) and then-Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL) was over the individual mandate. Clinton was for it and
Obama was against it. On January 31, 2008, Obama made the case against mandates in a Los Angeles, CA, debate: “Now, under any mandate, you are going to have problems with people who don’t end up having health coverage.
I think we can anticipate that there would also be people potentially who are not covered and are actually hurt if they have
a mandate imposed on them.” Both the House and Senate bills now contain an individual mandate. According to the President’s
own Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, under the Senate plan, 19 million Americans would pay $29 billion in taxes/fines and still receive no health care in return. You
Will Not Lose Your Doctor: On June 15, 2009, President Obama promised the American people: “No matter how we reform health care, we will keep this promise to the American people. If you like your doctor, you
will be able to keep your doctor, period. If you like your health care plan, you’ll be able to keep your health care
plan, period. No one will take it away, no matter what.” Again, the President’s own Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services confirms that the current Senate health bill breaks this promise. Seventeen million Americans will be forced out of their
existing health insurance. Worse, the CMS explains that continued Medicare cuts will encourage more doctors to stop seeing
Medicare patients entirely, and the 18 million people added to Medicaid will also make it next to impossible for those already
on Medicaid to find a doctor who will treat them. No Tax Hikes for People Making Less than $250,000:
On February 24, 2009, President Barack Obama promised the American people: “if your family earns less than $250,000 a year, you will not see your taxes increased a single dime. I repeat: not
one single dime.” Speaker Pelosi believes the Senate bill’s excise tax on insurance plans breaks this promise,
and she is right. But it is not the only way that Obamacare shatters the President’s no-middle-class-tax-hike pledge.
There are a slew of new taxes in the Senate bill, many of which will hit the middle class, including taxes on medical devices, tanning beds, insurance user fees, and brand name drugs (not to mention the individual
mandate which is enforced by a tax or the employer mandate which kills jobs and punishes the poor). Your Health Premiums Will Be $2,500 Lower: On October 15, 2008, then-Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL) promised the American people: “The only thing we’re going to try to do is lower costs so that those cost savings are passed onto you. And
we estimate we can cut the average family’s premium by about $2,500 per year.” According to the Congressional Budget Office, Americans in large-group employer-sponsored plans would, on average, see their premiums remain flat, while individuals who
purchase insurance in the non-group market would see much higher premiums in 2016 under Obamacare than they would under current
law. And many believe those estimates are optimistic. According to the Lewin Group, once fully implemented, health care spending per worker will increase for all employers who do not currently offer coverage
— $316 per worker under the Senate bill and $800 increase per worker under the House bill. Health Reform
Reduces the Deficit: On September 10, 2009, President Barack Obama promised the American people: “I will not sign a plan that adds one dime to our deficits – either now or in the future. Period.” Even
the President’s most ardent supporters are now admitting the Senate bill is full of budget gimmicks to make it appear Obamacare will reduce the deficit. When the true cost of Obamacare is considered, the final tab comes to $2.5 trillion with an honest accounting of Medicare reimbursement rates netting a $765 billion deficit all by itself. Tax Payer Funded Abortion:
On September 10, 2009, President Barack Obama promised the American people: “No federal dollars will be used to fund abortions.” While the House bill’s Stupak amendment language
fulfills this promise, the Senate’s Nelson compromise does not. If the Senate language were to become law, it would overturn the precedent set by the Hyde Amendment, the FEHBP (Federal Employees Health Benefits Plan), Military insurance through TRICARE, and the Indian
Health Service. Your taxdollars most definitely would be paying for elective abortions. No one expects a President to
fulfill 100% of his promises. But when the failures to live up to your past pledges pile so high, it shouldn’t be any
surprise that the American people have turned so strongly against President Obama’s health care plan. Tags: C-SPAN, campaign promises, closed-door negotiations, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Medicaid, Medicare, ObamaCare, transparency
House and Senate Bills Key Differences
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