The President focused on income inequality in his State of
the Union speech. This is an important
issue; as the gap widens between those rich and poor.
But income inequality is built into our public policy at so
many levels – and even at the lowest ends of the economic spectrum sometimes
the “wealthier” individuals receive better benefits than those who may need
them even more.
A case in point is how the insurance subsidies work in
the Affordable Care Act in the aftermath of the Supreme Court ruling of 2012.
In these, the poorest individuals and families – those living
below poverty level – fare the worst.
This is an inequality
that could be repaired easily and immediately.
Here’s how this particular inequality works. If you are a single person earning $11,375
per year, you pay the highest
percentage of your income for insurance as anyone in any income bracket.
An example: If you
want to buy “silver plan” health insurance on the open market, it will cost you
$2,535 per year – or almost one quarter of your annual income. Or you can purchase a bronze plan for $2,101. That is still over 18 percent of your income.
In other words, you can’t afford it.
But if you earn just $230 more per year, or $11,605, then the
result is almost magical. The cost
of a silver plan goes down to $232 per year – just two percent of your
income. And if you opt for a bronze
plan, it will cost you nothing.
It may seem hard to believe, but it’s true.
The reason is that the first person earns just below poverty
level (99 percent of poverty) and the second just above (101 percent of
poverty). And insurance subsidies begin
at 100 percent of poverty.
Congress was aware
that it was building this severe inequity into the law in 2010, but it was not
worried about it.
That was because it also passed a fix.
It mandated the expansion of Medicaid in all fifty states to
people earning 138 percent of poverty. With
Medicaid as an option, few people living near the poverty level would need or
want private insurance through an exchange.
But then the Supreme Court created a new problem. Without acknowledging the inequality in the
subsidy, it ruled in 2012 that Medicaid expansion was optional, effectively
undermining the fix.
In spite of the eighteen
months of political chaos that has resulted from this ruling, many states – and
we can now say a majority of them – have moved to remedy the inequality in
the only way they can.
They have chosen to expand Medicaid, taking up the federal
government on its offer to pay nearly one hundred percent of the cost. And over the next several years, most of the remaining
states will probably follow, but only after they’ve wasted billions of dollars
of their own resources during the delay.
But remedying the inequality isn’t the same as eliminating
it. In states like Connecticut, which
have embraced expansion – it just covers it over.
And in states like Florida that have not embraced expansion,
it still leaves millions of people out in the cold.
There is a solution
for everyone, and the federal government could move forward on it – if it is as
serious about reducing inequalities as the President is.
Right now, the federal government exempts people living
below poverty in states that have not expanded Medicaid from the mandate that
they buy insurance.
But there is a better alternative. It could offer everyone living below poverty the
option of “purchasing” a bronze plan at no cost. In other words, it could extend the same subsidy
to them (when they are not otherwise eligible for Medicaid) as is available to those
earning just above poverty. It would
probably also have to waive the deductibles in those plans for this group, and
there are ways it could do this.
This would cost the federal government no more than paying
for Medicaid expansion. It would get
millions more people covered – many of them adults, and many with chronic
conditions. And it would spare us endless
debates in reluctant states.
There are legislators in some of these states who have
proposed using new federal Medicaid dollars to purchase private insurance for low-income
individuals. That’s an idea, but
expanding subsidies would be a simpler solution.
It would cut out the reluctant state middle man, and reduce
inequality directly.
Paul Gionfriddo via email: gionfriddopaul@gmail.com. Twitter: @pgionfriddo. Facebook: www.facebook.com/paul.gionfriddo. LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/paulgionfriddo/
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