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SCI Teleconference: Federal Health Reform Update. Charles Milligan October 12, 2009. Preview of Presentation. Status Process Policy Endgame. Status. House – HR 3200. Jurisdiction held by three separate committees Passed Education & Labor Committee by party line vote of 26-22 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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SCI Teleconference:Federal HealthReform Update
Charles Milligan
October 12, 2009
Preview of Presentation
Status
Process
Policy
Endgame
Status
House – HR 3200 Jurisdiction held by three separate committees
Passed Education & Labor Committee by party line vote of 26-22
Passed Ways & Means Committee by party line vote of 23-18
Passed Energy & Commerce Committee by party line vote of 31-28
The version passed by Energy & Commerce included key amendments required by moderate “Blue Dog” Democrats: (a) states share cost of Medicaid expansion; (b) reduce subsidies to population between 133-400% FPL; (c) exempt more small employers from mandate; and (d) require public plan to negotiate provider rates, and to follow same insurance reforms.
The bill awaits action on the floor
Senate Jurisdiction held by two committees
Passed the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP) Committee by a party line vote of 13-10
Sen. Baucus introduced his Chairman’s Mark before the Senate Finance Committee on September 16; SFC vote is scheduled for October 12
But don’t forget: Senate Budget Committee passed the Budget Resolution by a vote of 53-43 on April 29: It said: reform must be budget neutral over 10 years
Process
House HR 3200, as amended in the Energy & Commerce
Committee, has advanced to the full House, where versions will be merged via House Rules Committee.
The merged version will be scored by CBO.
Then the House will take up various amendments, and once that process has concluded, a vote by the full House will occur. Key issue # 1: Whether “Blue Dog” amendments survive Key issue # 2: Whether House moves toward the Senate version,
per pressure from White House.
Passage requires simple majority.
Senate Senate Finance Committee:
Several amendments were made to the original Chairman’s Mark. (The Chairman’s Mark was the default bill, and only was amended by a majority vote in the SFC.)
Final committee vote scheduled for October 12
Senate continued
Once the bill emerges from SFC, both bills (SFC and Senate HELP) will be merged on the Senate Floor, per Senate Rules Committee, with heavy input.
Then CBO will score the merged bill.
Then the full Senate will address the merged legislation. The full Senate will consider and vote on various amendments, and once that process has concluded, a vote by the full Senate could occur. Key issue # 1: Will a comprehensive reform bill be able to secure
60 votes? Key issue # 2: If not, what is achievable through Reconciliation?
Senate “Reconciliation” Reconciliation: Bill may pass the Senate with
simple majority
Key problems with Reconciliation: Byrd Rule: Can only take up “budget” matters to
“reconcile” legislation with Senate Budget Resolution; Senate Parliamentarian decides
Laws are time-limited to 10 year budget window; then sunset• Example: SCHIP – created in 1997, not permanent, nearly
died in 2007• Example: “Bush tax cuts”
Political Problems with Reconciliation
1. Lack of bipartisanship
2. Is reconciliation version too far right for the House, because some Democrats are jettisoned to garner a few Republicans?
3. Is reconciliation version too far left for the House, because moderate Democrats and all Republicans are jettisoned?
4. Is reform possible when limited to finance only?
5. Is reform stable if it sunsets?
Conference Committee and Endgame The version that passes the House, and the version that
passes the Senate, will not be identical.
A Conference Committee will be formed to reconcile the two versions, and it will be scored by CBO.
After those deliberations, the Conference Committee’s version will return to the respective Chambers for a final vote up or down vote.
If those versions pass, the bill goes to the President.
Policy
General Areas of Agreement across Proposals
Coverage expansion Expand Medicaid to an across-the-board eligibility floor, particularly to help
childless adults, probably to 133% FPL Provide tiered subsidy to others; up to somewhere between 300-400% FPL
Create Exchange/Connector/Gateway Purchasing pool model for individuals, small employers, and those without
access to ESI
Individual mandate With hardship exception
“Medical home”
Workforce development grants
General Areas of Agreement across Proposals (continued)
Employer engagement For large employers (pay or play mandate; or weaker “free rider”
penalty) For “larger” small employers, with concomitant tax credits for some
Insurance market reforms Community rating rules (e.g., tobacco use; age; family size) Guarantee issue/pre-existing condition underwriting prohibition No annual or lifetime benefit caps No rescission
Process to define qualifying “minimal benefit package” Necessary for purchasing products in the Exchange, and to know
whether the individual mandate has been met; pre-empt state rules
General Areas of Agreement across Proposals (continued)
New revenue from: Taxing “high benefit” plans Penalties on individuals and employers who violate
mandates
Savings from: DSH (Medicare and Medicaid) Medicare Advantage plans Medicaid Rx rebates (including inside managed care)
Invest in Comparative Effectiveness research But limit use of results
Major Areas of Disagreement Public option
Stealth single payer, or necessary where carriers have monopoly or oligopoly?
Will it set provider rates (ala Medicare and Medicaid FFS, or negotiate provide rates?
Magnitude of expansions, subsidies, tax credits The lower the subsidies and credits, the more people will be exempted
from the mandates
Involvement with large employers Leave them alone as qualifying plans, or make them conform over
time to federally proscribed minimum benefits?
Major Areas of Disagreement (continued)
Federalism: House wants stronger federal role; Senate decentralizes more roles to states:
• Insurance oversight• Locus of Exchange• Financing for Medicaid expansion (how much $$ from states;
match rate for expansion)• SCHIP: Alive and well, or RIP?
“Affordability” assumptions for middle class
Other forms of revenue (tax on insurers? The wealthy?)
Major Areas of Disagreement (continued)
Payment reform Allow Medicare gain-sharing for “Accountable Care
Organizations”? Increase primary care rates relative to specialty care? Cut Medicare payments attributable to avoidable hospital
readmissions? Tie some portion of hospital money (in Medicare) to
quality/performance? Medicare regional rate re-alignment, per Dartmouth Atlas?
Malpractice reform included? If so, with mandate, or merely “Sense of the Senate”?
Endgame
Scenario #1:Democrats cannot get to 60 votes in Senate, and Reconciliation is used
In all likelihood, this would limit the scale to financial reforms only, such as: Coverage expansions, including subsidies Medicare payment reform (e.g., cut MA rates and maybe more) Tax “high cost benefit plans” Reduce DSH (Medicaid and Medicare) Increase Medicaid Rx rebates, especially inside managed care Pay for comparative effectiveness studies Create tax credits for small businesses and others Workforce development grants
Net costs must be offset with net savings, in 10 years, to reconcile with Senate Budget Resolution
Scenario #1 continued
What likely could not be achieved in Reconciliation: Individual mandate Employer mandate Insurance market reforms Creation of Exchange/Connector/Gateway
The less-controversial elements that are not appropriate for Reconciliation could be included in a companion (separate) bill: Insurance market reforms
• Yet, AHIP released a report on October 11, 2009 arguing that rates will climb much faster than status quo with market reform and no Individual Mandate; AHIP says premiums stay affordable only with all healthy people in the risk pool, or through use of underwriting tools
Bless creation of Exchange/Connector/Gateway as a purchasing pool vehicle
Scenario #1 continued
Scenario #2:Democrats can get to 60 votes in Senate, and Reconciliation is not needed
In all likelihood, this would mean a “moderate” version of reform Coverage expansions with low federal price tag
• Cost shift more Medicaid to states• Smaller subsidy and tax credits for others
No public option, unless with (very) limited trigger Similar array of revenue increases, Medicare cuts,
and Medicaid cuts as “Reconciliation” version Establish federal benefit benchmark for qualifying plans
(and as comparison point for satisfaction of individual mandate)
Scenario #2 continued
“Moderate” version of reform, continued Individual mandate
• More expansive “hardship” exception for individual mandate, given likelihood of reduced subsidies to keep federal $$ down
Employer mandate• Attachment point only at larger employers
Insurance market reform• Community rating rules• Prohibition on pre-existing condition exclusions/guarantee
issue• No annual or lifetime caps• No rescission
-26-
Contact Information
Charles Milligan
Executive Director
The Hilltop Institute
University of Maryland, Baltimore County (UMBC)
410.455.6274
www.hilltopinstitute.org