Source: https://www.readkong.com/page/private-health-insurance-4586649
Timestamp: 2020-04-08 14:22:04
Document Index: 369231278

Matched Legal Cases: ['§ 1501', '§ 1002', '§ 5000', '§ 1311', '§ 1', '§ 1', '§ 1421', '§ 45', '§ 5000', '§ 1311', '§ 18022', '§ 36', '§ 5000', '§ 1', '§ 18071', '§ 36', '§ 18071', '§ 4980']

PRIVATE HEALTH INSURANCE - Early Evidence Finds Premium Tax Credit Likely Contributed to Expanded Coverage, but Some Lack Access to Affordable Plans
PRIVATE HEALTH INSURANCE Early Evidence Finds Premium Tax Credit Likely Contributed to Expanded Coverage, but Some Lack Access to Affordable Plans Report to Congressional Committees March 2015 GAO-15-312 United States Government Accountability Office
United States Government Accountability Office Highlights of GAO-15-312, a report to congressional committees March 2015 PRIVATE HEALTH INSURANCE Early Evidence Finds Premium Tax Credit Likely Contributed to Expanded Coverage, but Some Lack Access to Affordable Plans Why GAO Did This Study The number of uninsured individuals and the rising cost of health insurance have been long-standing issues.
PPACA mandated that most individuals have health insurance that provides minimum essential coverage or pay a tax penalty. To make health insurance more affordable and expand access, PPACA created the APTC to subsidize the cost of exchange plans’ premiums for those eligible. PPACA used two standards for defining affordability of health insurance: 8 percent of household income for the purposes of minimum essential coverage and 9.5 percent for APTC eligibility for individuals offered employer-sponsored plans. PPACA mandated that GAO review the affordability of health insurance coverage. GAO examined (1) what is known about the effects of the APTC and (2) the extent to which affordable health benefits plans are available and individuals are able to maintain minimum essential coverage.
GAO conducted a structured literature search to identify studies on the rate of uninsured individuals, among other topics, and interviewed experts from HHS, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), and 11 research and industry organizations to understand factors affecting affordability. GAO also analyzed the variation in the affordability of exchange plan premiums nationwide using 2014 data—the most recent data available at the time of GAO’s analysis. GAO received technical comments on a draft of this report from HHS and IRS and incorporated them as appropriate. What GAO Found Early evidence suggests that the advance premium tax credit (APTC)—the refundable tax credit that can be paid on an advance basis—likely contributed to an expansion of health insurance coverage in 2014 because it significantly reduced the cost of exchange plans’ premiums for those eligible.
Although there are limitations to measuring the effects of the APTC using currently available data, surveys GAO identified estimated that the uninsured rate declined significantly among households with incomes eligible for the APTC. For example, one survey found that the rate of uninsured among individuals with household incomes that make them financially eligible for the APTC fell 5.2 percentage points between September 2013 and September 2014.This expansion in health insurance coverage is likely partially a result of the APTC having reduced the cost of health insurance premiums for those eligible.
Among those eligible for the APTC who the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) initially reported selected a plan through a federally facilitated exchange or one of two state-based exchanges, the APTC reduced premiums by 76 percent, on average. As of January 2015, data were not yet available on the extent to which the APTC reduced 2015 premiums, although studies have found that, on average, premiums (before applying the APTC) changed only modestly from 2014 to 2015, though some areas saw significant increases or decreases. Most nonelderly adults had access to affordable health benefits plans—as defined by the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA)—but some may face challenges maintaining coverage.
Most nonelderly adults had access to affordable plans through their employer, Medicaid, the exchanges, or other sources as of March 2014, although about 16 percent of nonelderly adults remained uninsured. While there are many reasons people remain uninsured, some people may not have access to affordable coverage, including (1) lowincome nonelderly adults—those with household income below 100 percent of the federal poverty level—who live in one of the 23 states that chose not to expand Medicaid and (2) some nonelderly adults who do not have affordable employer-sponsored insurance and who were not eligible for the APTC.
For those with incomes too high to qualify for the APTC, the affordability of health insurance coverage available in the individual exchanges in 2014 varied by age, household size, income, and location. For example, a 60-year-old with an income of 450 percent of the federal poverty level would have had to spend more than 8 percent of their household income for the lowest-cost plan in 84 percent of all health insurance rating areas in the United States, but a 27-year-old had access to an affordable plan in all but one. Regardless of the affordability of premiums, some may face challenges in maintaining coverage that qualifies under PPACA as minimum essential coverage; for example, changes in income can result in changes in APTC eligibility.
This report provides an early look at the effect of the APTC and the affordability of health insurance under PPACA. However, it is important to note that these findings about the first year of the exchanges cannot be generalized to future years. Numerous factors, including additional data and changes in trends in health care costs, could affect the affordability of health insurance going forward. View GAO-15-312. For more information, contact John E. Dicken at (202) 512-7114 or dickenj@gao.gov.
Page i GAO-15-312 Affordability of Health Insurance Letter 1 Background 6 Early Evidence Suggests That While the APTC Likely Contributed to an Expansion of Coverage, the Small Employer Tax Credit Has Had Little Effect 12 While Most Nonelderly Adults Had Access to Affordable Health Insurance Coverage, Maintaining Minimum Essential Coverage May Be Challenging for Some 25 Concluding Observations 36 Agency Comments 36 Appendix I Potential Effects of Changing the Affordability Threshold for Employer-Sponsored Insurance 39 Appendix II Objectives, Scope and Methodology 42 Appendix III Affordability of the Lowest-Cost Bronze Plan, by Rating Area 47 Appendix IV GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments 56 Tables Table 1: 2013 Federal Poverty Level (FPL) for an Individual and a Family of Four in the 48 Contiguous States 8 Table 2: Percentage of Household Income Enrollee Is Required to Contribute for Reference Plan Premiums, after Applying the APTC 9 Table 3: Survey Estimates of the Change in the Percent of Uninsured Nonelderly Adults by Household Income As a Percent of the Federal Poverty Level (FPL) 14 Contents
Page ii GAO-15-312 Affordability of Health Insurance Table 4: Average Monthly Advance Premium Tax Credit (APTC) Amount and Percent Reduction in Premiums after APTC for Individuals Who Selected a Plan through a Federally Facilitated Exchange or a State-Based Exchange that Used the Federal Website for Enrollment in 2014 and Were Deemed Eligible for the APTC in 2014, by Metal Tier 17 Table 5: Methodological Information for Surveys That Estimated the Change in the Rate of Uninsured Nonelderly Adults 43 Figures Figure 1: Number of Employers That Claimed the Small Employer Tax Credit, 2010-2012 22 Figure 2: Percentage of Household Income That Would Have to Be Spent on Premiums for the Lowest-Cost Bronze Plan by Household Characteristics and Income As a Percent of the Federal Poverty Level (FPL) (2014) 31 Figure 3: Percentage of Household Income That Would Have to Be Spent on Premiums for the Lowest-Cost Bronze Plan for a 60-Year-Old Individual with Household Income at 450 Percent of the Federal Poverty Level (2014) 47 Figure 4: Percentage of Household Income That Would Have to Be Spent on Premiums for the Lowest-Cost Bronze Plan for a 60-Year-Old Individual with Household Income at 500 Percent of the Federal Poverty Level (2014) 48 Figure 5: Percentage of Household Income That Would Have to Be Spent on Premiums for the Lowest-Cost Bronze Plan for a 60-Year-Old Individual with Household Income at 600 Percent of the Federal Poverty Level (2014) 49 Figure 6: Percentage of Household Income That Would Have to Be Spent on Premiums for the Lowest-Cost Bronze Plan for a 27-Year-Old Individual with Household Income at 450 Percent of the Federal Poverty Level (2014) 50 Figure 7: Percentage of Household Income That Would Have to Be Spent on Premiums for the Lowest-Cost Bronze Plan for a 27-Year-Old Individual with Household Income at 500 Percent of the Federal Poverty Level (2014) 51 Figure 8: Percentage of Household Income That Would Have to Be Spent on Premiums for the Lowest-Cost Bronze Plan for a 27-Year-Old Individual with Household Income at 600 Percent of the Federal Poverty Level (2014) 52
Page iii GAO-15-312 Affordability of Health Insurance Figure 9: Percentage of Household Income That Would Have to Be Spent on Premiums for the Lowest-Cost Bronze Plan for a 40-Year-Old Married Couple with Two Children Under 21-Years-Old and Have Household Income at 450 Percent of the Federal Poverty Level (2014) 53 Figure 10: Percentage of Household Income That Would Have to Be Spent on Premiums for the Lowest-Cost Bronze Plan for a 40-Year-Old Married Couple with Two Children Under 21-Years-Old and Have Household Income at 500 Percent of the Federal Poverty Level (2014) 54 Figure 11: Percentage of Household Income That Would Have to Be Spent on Premiums for the Lowest-Cost Bronze Plan for a 40-Year-Old Married Couple with Two Children Under 21-Years-Old and Have Household Income at 600 Percent of the Federal Poverty Level (2014) 55
Page iv GAO-15-312 Affordability of Health Insurance Abbreviations AHRQ Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality APTC Advance Premium Tax Credit CBO Congressional Budget Office CMS Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services ESI employer-sponsored insurance FPL federal poverty level HCERA Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010 HHS Department of Health and Human Services IRS Internal Revenue Service KFF The Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation MEPS Medical Expenditure Panel Survey PPACA Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act SHOP Small Business Health Option Programs This is a work of the U.S.
government and is not subject to copyright protection in the United States. The published product may be reproduced and distributed in its entirety without further permission from GAO. However, because this work may contain copyrighted images or other material, permission from the copyright holder may be necessary if you wish to reproduce this material separately.
Page 1 GAO-15-312 Affordability of Health Insurance 441 G St. N.W. Washington, DC 20548 March 23, 2015 Congressional Committees The number of uninsured individuals and the rising cost of health insurance have been long-standing issues. From 1997 through 2013, the number of nonelderly uninsured in the United States fluctuated between about 30 and 42.5 million and was about 20.4 percent of the nonelderly population in 2013.1 Many of these uninsured individuals were not eligible for public insurance, such as Medicaid—the joint federal-state health coverage program for certain low-income individuals—nor were they offered employer-sponsored insurance (ESI).
Before 2014, their remaining option was to purchase a plan on the private, individual market, but these plans were often difficult to afford given that the uninsured typically have low incomes. In 2013, 85 percent of the uninsured were in households earning less than about 400 percent of the federal poverty level (FPL).2 The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) included a number of provisions to address these challenges. Among other things, PPACA mandated that, with some exceptions, individuals must have health insurance that provides “minimum essential coverage” or pay a tax penalty, a requirement many refer to as the individual mandate.3 1 M.
E. Martinez and R. A. Cohen, Health Insurance Coverage: Early Release of Estimates from the National Health Interview Survey, January–June 2014 (Hyattsville, Md.: National Center for Health Statistics, 2014); and Health Insurance Coverage: Early Release of Estimates from the National Health Interview Survey, January – March 2009, (Hyattsville, Md.: National Center for Health Statistics, 2009).
Health The “nonelderly” refers to adults under age 65. In this report, we refer to nonelderly adults when we discuss those who are uninsured. 2 The Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation, Distribution of the Nonelderly Uninsured by Federal Poverty Level, accessed Jan. 5, 2015, http://kff.org/uninsured/stateindicator/distribution-by-fpl-2. The FPL is an amount updated annually by the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to set eligibility for various means-tested programs. 3 Pub. L. No. 111-148, §§ 1501, 10106, 124 Stat. 119, 242, 907 (2010), as amended by the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010 (HCERA), Pub.
L. No. 111-152, §§ 1002, 1004, 124 Stat. 1029, 1032, 1034 (2010) (codified at 26 U.S.C. § 5000A). In this report, references to PPACA include any amendments made by HCERA.
Page 2 GAO-15-312 Affordability of Health Insurance insurance that meets the minimum essential coverage standard includes certain types of government-sponsored coverage (such as Medicare Part A or Medicaid) as well as most types of private insurance plans (such as ESI) that provide health benefits consistent with the law.4 To expand access to health insurance that qualifies as minimum essential coverage, PPACA created the premium tax credit to subsidize premium costs for plans purchased by eligible individuals and families through the exchanges—marketplaces where participating private issuers offer consumers a variety of qualified health plans that constitute minimum essential coverage.5 4 Health insurance coverage that provides limited benefits, such as dental-only coverage, or Medicaid coverage that provides less than full benefits, such as Medicaid plans that cover only family planning, does not constitute minimum essential coverage.
Certain lowand moderate-income individuals and families may be eligible for this credit, which is refundable and can be paid to insurance companies in advance to reduce enrollees’ premium Medicare is a federal health insurance program for individuals aged 65 and older, individuals under age 65 with certain disabilities, and individuals diagnosed with end-stage renal disease. Medicare Part A covers inpatient medical benefits. Other Medicare programs cover different goods and services.
5 PPACA required the establishment of exchanges in each state by Jan. 1, 2014. In states that did not elect to operate their own state-based exchange, PPACA required the federal government to establish and operate an exchange in the state, known as federally facilitated exchanges. Pub. L. No. 111-148, §§ 1311(b), 1321(c), 124 Stat. 119 at 173, 186. Our report assumed that individuals in all states could potentially be eligible for the premium tax credit, regardless of whether they purchased insurance through a statebased exchange or a federally facilitated exchange, consistent with the final rule issued by the Internal Revenue Service.
See Health Insurance Premium Tax Credit, preamble 1.f and regulations to be codified at 26 C.F.R. §§ 1.36B-0 et seq.; 77 Fed. Reg. 30377, 30378, 30385 (May 23, 2012). The U.S. Supreme Court will consider whether PPACA authorizes the premium tax credit for individuals who purchase coverage through federally facilitated exchanges. See King v. Burwell, 759 F.3d 358 (4th Cir. 2014), cert. granted, 135 S. Ct. 475 (Nov. 7, 2014) (No. 14-114).
Page 3 GAO-15-312 Affordability of Health Insurance costs for exchange plans. In this report, we refer to advance payments of the credit as advance premium tax credits (APTC).6 In addition, PPACA required the establishment of small business health option programs (SHOP) in each state to allow small employers to compare available health insurance options in their states and facilitate the enrollment of their employees in qualifying coverage. To provide an incentive for them to do so, PPACA established the small employer health insurance tax credit (referred to in this report as the small employer tax credit).7 Individuals are exempt from the requirement to have minimum essential coverage when such coverage is not “affordable,” as defined by PPACA.
In general, plans are considered affordable if their cost does not exceed 8 percent of household income. In addition, for purposes of determining eligibility for the APTC, PPACA considers ESI affordable if an employee’s share of a qualifying self-only plan costs no more than 9.5 percent of household income.
It subsidizes the share of the premiums small employers pay for their employees’ health insurance. 8 6 Individuals who receive APTC must file federal income tax returns to reconcile the amount of the premium tax credit allowed based on reported income with the amount of the premium tax credit received in advance (APTC). An individual whose premium tax credit for the taxable year exceeds the individual’s APTC payments may receive the excess as an income tax refund. An individual whose APTC payments for the taxable year exceed the individual’s premium tax credit owes the excess as an additional income tax liability, subject to certain caps.
26 C.F.R. § 1.36B-4.
Individuals with an offer of ESI that meets or is below this threshold are not eligible to receive the APTC. 7 Pub. L. No. 111-148, §§ 1421, 10105, 124 Stat. 119 at 237, 906 (codified at 26 U.S.C. § 45R). 8 PPACA adjusts the thresholds at which premiums become unaffordable to reflect the excess of the rate of premium growth over the rate of income growth for the preceding calendar year. In 2015, the threshold at which premiums are unaffordable for purposes of determining an exemption from the requirement to have minimum essential coverage rose from 8 percent of household income to 8.05 percent.
Similarly, the threshold at which an employee’s share of ESI premiums are considered unaffordable for purposes of APTC eligibility rose from 9.5 percent to 9.56 percent.
Page 4 GAO-15-312 Affordability of Health Insurance PPACA mandated that GAO review the affordability of health insurance coverage 5 years after enactment.9 1. what is known about the effects of the APTC and the small employer tax credit on health insurance coverage; and Specifically, in this report we examine 2. the extent to which affordable health benefits plans are available and individuals are able to maintain minimum essential coverage. To examine what is known about the effects of the APTC and the small employer tax credit on health insurance coverage, we conducted a structured literature search to identify relevant studies.10 9 PPACA also mandated that GAO review what is known about the effects of lowering the employer-sponsored insurance (ESI) affordability threshold.
We discuss this topic in appendix I.
To conduct this review, we searched over 30 reference databases for studies published on these topics. Two analysts independently reviewed each of the results for relevance. To supplement this search, we performed further Internet searches and asked experts we interviewed to recommend literature. We interviewed experts from 11 research or industry organizations as well as officials from the Department of Health and Human Services’ (HHS) Center for Consumer Information and Insurance Oversight, Assistant Secretary of Planning and Evaluation, and the Chief Actuary; and from the Internal Revenue Service (IRS).
We identified the experts through their published or other work, and we asked them about how the tax credits were likely to affect health insurance coverage. We also reviewed laws, regulations, and guidance related to PPACA’s individual mandate, the APTC, the small employer tax credit, individual exchange regulation, and the ESI affordability threshold. To further analyze the effects of the small employer tax credit on health insurance coverage, we incorporated summary data from our previous report on this topic and requested updated summary data from the IRS on claims for tax years 2011 and 10 This report discusses the advance premium tax credit rather than the premium tax credit because complete information on the premium tax credit was not available during the period of our review.
In particular, individuals who received the APTC must, when filing their 2014 federal income tax returns, reconcile the amount of the premium tax credit allowed based on their reported income with the amount of the premium tax credit received in advance based on their anticipated income at the time of enrollment. Because our work preceded the reconciliation process, the only data available for our analysis was APTC data, not the reconciled amounts.
Page 5 GAO-15-312 Affordability of Health Insurance 2012, the most current years available at the time of our analysis.11 To examine the extent to which affordable health benefits plans are available and individuals are able to maintain minimum essential coverage, we reviewed studies resulting from our literature review, as well interviewed experts as described above. We asked experts about the types of individuals that may have more or less difficulty accessing affordable coverage and maintaining minimum essential coverage. In addition, we analyzed 2014 premium data—the most recent data available at the time of our analysis—from the federally facilitated exchanges and state-based exchanges to determine the percent of household income that households would have had to spend on premiums for the lowest-cost plans available.
We obtained these premium data from The Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF) and from the state of New York. To assess these data for reliability, we interviewed key officials, checked the data for outliers and validated selected data. We found both datasets to be reliable for our purposes. A more extensive discussion of our scope and methodology appears in appendix II.
To assess the reliability of the data, we reviewed the data and supporting documentation for obvious errors, as well as IRS’s internal controls for producing the data. We found the data to be sufficiently reliable for our purposes. We conducted this performance audit from July 2014 through March 2015 in accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable basis for our findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. We believe that the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for our findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives.
11 GAO, Small Employer Health Tax Credit: Factors Contributing to Low Use and Complexity, GAO-12-549 (Washington, D.C.: May 14, 2012).
Page 6 GAO-15-312 Affordability of Health Insurance Beginning January 1, 2014, PPACA required most citizens and legal residents of the United States to maintain health insurance that qualifies as minimum essential coverage for themselves and their dependents or pay a tax penalty. Individuals are exempt from this requirement if they would have to pay more than 8 percent of their household income for the lowest-cost self-only health plan that is available to the individual.12 Beginning October 1, 2013, individuals were able to shop for private health insurance coverage that qualifies as minimum essential coverage through marketplaces, also referred to as exchanges, which offer choices of qualified health plans.13 In 34 states, the federal government operated the individual exchanges, known as federally facilitated exchanges, while 17 states operated state-based exchanges in 2014.14 12 Similarly, families are exempt when the lowest-cost health plan available to the family exceeds 8 percent of household income.
For purposes of the individual mandate, household income is the taxpayer’s modified adjusted gross income, plus that of every other individual in a family for whom an individual can properly claim a personal exemption deduction and who is required to file a federal income tax return. Modified adjusted gross income is a tax-based definition of income established in PPACA. See 26 U.S.C. § 5000A(c)(4)(B). Other exemptions may be available for certain eligible individuals, such as those determined to have suffered certain hardships, members of Native American tribes, and those who qualify for an exemption for religious reasons.
Individuals can purchase self-only plans, or they can purchase family plans for themselves, their spouses, and their dependents. 13 PPACA requires the insurance plans offered under an exchange, known as qualified health plans, to provide a package of essential health benefits—including coverage for specific service categories, such as ambulatory care, prescription drugs, and hospitalization. In addition to these categories, states may require or restrict coverage of other benefits by qualified health plans. Pub. L. No. 111-148, §§ 1311(d), 10104(e)(1), 124 Stat. 119 at 176, 900.
14 Some states that elected not to establish a state-based exchange entered into a partnership with the Department of Health and Human Services’ (HHS) Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services in which HHS establishes and operates the exchange while states assist HHS in carrying out certain functions of the exchange. Because a partnership exchange is a variation of a federally facilitated exchange, we include partnership states as federally facilitated exchange states in this report. In addition, in 2014, two states— Idaho and New Mexico—operated their own exchange, but enrollees signed up for health insurance through the federal website, http://www.healthcare.gov.
The term “state” in this report includes the District of Columbia.
Background PPACA Health Insurance Requirements and Subsidies
Page 7 GAO-15-312 Affordability of Health Insurance Qualified health plans on the exchanges may provide minimum essential coverage at one of four levels of coverage that reflect out-of-pocket costs that may be incurred by an enrollee. The four levels of coverage correspond to a plan’s actuarial value—the percentage of the total average costs of allowed benefits paid by a health plan—and are designated by metal tiers: 60 percent (bronze), 70 percent (silver), 80 percent (gold), and 90 percent (platinum).15 For example, a gold plan with an 80 percent actuarial value would be expected to pay, on average, 80 percent of a standard population’s expected medical expenses for the essential health benefits.
The individuals covered by the plan would be expected to pay, on average, the remaining 20 percent of the expected cost-sharing expenses in the form of deductibles, copayments, and coinsurance.16 Under PPACA, issuers are allowed to adjust premium rates within specified limits for plans, based on the number of people covered under a particular policy and the covered individuals’ age, tobacco use, and area of residence.17 Individuals obtaining insurance through the exchanges may be eligible for the APTC under PPACA if they meet applicable income requirements and are not be eligible for coverage under another qualifying plan or program, such as ESI or Medicaid.
To meet the APTC’s income requirements, Each state must divide its state into one or more rating areas that all issuers must use in setting premium rates. The rating area is the lowest geographic level by which issuers can vary premiums. 15 42 U.S.C. § 18022(d). In addition to these metal tiers, catastrophic plans are available to those under 30 years of age or to those who are exempt from the requirement to have minimum essential coverage because of a hardship or because the lowest-cost plan available would cost more than 8 percent of one’s household income. Catastrophic plans’ actuarial value must be lower than that of a bronze plan, so these plans have the highest level of cost sharing, although they cover preventive care at no cost.
Enrollees are not eligible for the APTC.
16 These cost-sharing provisions apply only to the essential health benefits and other goods and services that insurers cover. Goods and services that are not covered may cause additional expenses to be incurred. 17 In 2013 in most states, applicable laws allowed broader variation for age and also allowed variation for other factors, such as health status and gender, which PPACA prohibited in 2014. See GAO, Private Health Insurance: The Range of Base Premiums in the Individual Market by County in January 2013 (Washington D.C., Sept. 5, 2014) GAO-14-772R.
Page 8 GAO-15-312 Affordability of Health Insurance individuals must have household incomes between 100 and 400 percent of the FPL (see table 1).18 Table 1: 2013 Federal Poverty Level (FPL) for an Individual and a Family of Four in the 48 Contiguous States Percentage of Poverty Poverty level for single person Poverty level for family of four 100 $11,490 $23,550 133 $15,282 $31,322 200 $22,980 $47,100 300 $34,470 $70,650 400 $45,960 $94,200 Source: Department of Health and Human Services.
GAO-15-312 Note: The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services publishes separate FPL guidelines for Alaska and Hawaii that are higher than for the 48 continuous states, reflecting higher cost-of-living allowances.
The amount of the APTC is calculated based on an eligible individual’s household income relative to the cost of premiums for the “reference plan,” even if the individual chooses to enroll in a different plan. The reference plan is the second-lowest-cost silver plan available.19 18 Household income is the taxpayer’s modified adjusted gross income, plus that of every other individual in a family for whom an individual can properly claim a personal exemption deduction and who is required to file a federal income tax return. For purposes of the premium tax credit, and in contrast to the individual mandate, modified adjusted gross income includes nontaxable Social Security benefits.
See 26 U.S.C. § 36B(d)(2)(B); 26 U.S.C. § 5000A(c)(4)(C).
The APTC in effect caps the maximum amount of income that an individual would be required to contribute to the premiums for the reference plan. The capped amount varies depending on the enrollee’s household income relative to the FPL and is less for enrollees with lower household income. Table 2 shows the maximum percentage of household income a qualifying enrollee would have to pay if they enrolled in the reference plan. If the enrollee chooses a more expensive plan, such as a gold or Certain lawfully present immigrants with incomes below 100 percent of FPL who would eligible for Medicaid but for their immigration status are eligible for the APTC.
19 The second-lowest-cost silver plan available is the plan that applies to a taxpayer’s “coverage family.” Members of the coverage family are those for whom a taxpayer claims a personal exemption and who are enrolled in a qualified health plan through an exchange and not eligible for other minimum essential coverage.
Page 9 GAO-15-312 Affordability of Health Insurance platinum plan, they would pay a higher percentage of their income. If the enrollee chooses a less expensive plan, such as a bronze plan, they would pay less.20 Table 2: Percentage of Household Income Enrollee Is Required to Contribute for Reference Plan Premiums, after Applying the APTC The amount of the APTC is determined based on an enrollee’s family size and anticipated household income for the year, which is subject to adjustment—or reconciliation—the following year. Specifically, the final amount of the credit is determined when the enrollee files an income tax return for the taxable year, which may result in a tax liability or refund if the enrollee’s actual, reported household income amount is greater or less than the anticipated income on which the amount of APTC was based.
Percentage of the FPL Premium contribution as a percentage of income 0 to less than 100% Generally does not qualify for APTC At least 100 but less than 133% 2% At least 133 but less than 150% 3-4% At least 150 but less than 200% 4-6.3% At least 200 but less than 250% 6.3-8.1% At least 250 but less than 300% 8.1-9.5% At least 301 but less than 400% 9.5% Over 400% Does not qualify for APTC Source: IRS and 26 C.F.R. §§ 1.36B-2(b), 1.36B-3(g)(2) (2012). | GAO-15-312 To further improve access to care, certain low-income individuals may also be eligible for an additional type of income-based subsidy established by PPACA, known as cost-sharing subsidies, which reduce out-of-pocket costs for such things as copayments for physician visits or prescription drugs.21 20 If the amount of the credit is larger than the premium itself, the enrollee pays no premium.
Conversely, if the premium cost is less than the percentage of household income an individual is required to contribute based on FPL, then the individual will not receive a tax credit.
To be eligible for these cost-sharing subsidies, individuals must have household incomes between 100 and 250 percent of the FPL, not be eligible for coverage under another qualifying plan or program such as Medicaid or ESI, and be enrolled in a silver plan through 21 42 U.S.C. § 18071.
Page 10 GAO-15-312 Affordability of Health Insurance an exchange.22 As a practical matter, because individuals eligible for Medicaid are not eligible for the APTC, the minimum income level for these subsidies differs between states that chose to expand Medicaid under PPACA and those that did not.
Cost-sharing subsidies effectively raise the actuarial value of the silver plan. 23 In states that chose to expand Medicaid under PPACA, nonelderly adults are eligible for Medicaid when their household income is less than 138 percent of the FPL. Because those eligible for Medicaid are not eligible for the APTC, the minimum income level for the APTC in Medicaid expansion states is effectively 138 percent of the FPL. In states that chose not to expand Medicaid, the minimum income level for individuals to qualify for APTC and cost-sharing subsidies is 100 percent of the FPL, as specified in PPACA, assuming the state’s Medicaid eligibility threshold is at or below this level.24 As of January 2015, 27 states and the District of Columbia opted to expand Medicaid under PPACA.
Under PPACA, employers that meet certain conditions must offer health insurance to some employees. Employers with at least 50 full-time equivalent employees—which includes employees whose hours average at least 30-hours per week—must offer qualifying health insurance to their 22 American Indians and Alaska Natives are eligible for cost-sharing assistance up to 300 percent of the FPL. 23 Specifically, PPACA authorizes states to expand eligibility for Medicaid to most nonelderly adults whose income is at or below 133 percent of the FPL. PPACA also specifies that an income disregard in the amount of 5 percent of the FPL be deducted from an individual’s income when determining Medicaid eligibility, which effectively raises the income eligibility threshold for newly eligible Medicaid recipients in expansion states to 138 percent of the FPL.
24 See 26 U.S.C. § 36B(c)(1)(A). The minimum income levels applicable to APTC also apply to federal cost-sharing subsidies, which reduce out-of-pocket costs for such things as copayments for physician visits or prescription drugs. See 42 U.S.C. § 18071(b)(2). Employer-Sponsored Insurance under PPACA
Page 11 GAO-15-312 Affordability of Health Insurance full time employees or face tax penalties if at least one full-time employee receives the APTC.25 In contrast to PPACA’s affordability threshold of 8 percent of household income for the purpose of assessing penalties for failure to maintain minimum essential coverage, PPACA requires ESI to meet two different affordability tests for the purposes of determining eligibility for the APTC.
First, the employee’s share of the ESI premiums covering an individual, also referred to as a self-only plan, must not exceed 9.5 percent of the employee’s household income. Second, the insurance offered must cover 60 percent of the actuarial value of health care for the average person to qualify as affordable for purposes of the APTC. Employees who are offered ESI that meets both of these tests are not eligible for the APTC. Some employees may be offered qualifying ESI that costs between 8 and 9.5 percent of household income. If these individuals do not have access to insurance on an individual exchange that costs less than 8 percent of household income, they are exempt from the individual mandate and will not have to pay a tax penalty if they forgo coverage.
However, these individuals are not eligible for the APTC.
Because small employers are not required to offer health insurance and have been less likely to offer health insurance than large employers, PPACA established a small employer tax credit as an incentive for them to provide insurance by making it more affordable.26 25 26 U.S.C. § 4980H. These requirements are being phased in over time. In 2015, employers with between 50 to 99 full-time equivalent employees are exempt from the requirement. Employers with more than 100 full-time equivalent employees must offer qualifying health insurance coverage to 70 percent of full-time employees in 2015. In 2016, employers with 50 or more full-time equivalent employees will be required to offer qualifying coverage to 95 percent of their full-time employees.
Employers out of compliance will be subject to an annual tax penalty of $2,000 times the number of full-time employees minus 30, if one of their full-time employees receives the APTC to purchase health insurance through the individual exchanges. See Shared Responsibility for Employers Regarding Health Coverage, 79 Fed. Reg. 8544 (Feb. 12, 2014). The credit is available to certain employers—small business and tax-exempt entities— with employees earning low wages and that pay at least half of their employees’ health insurance premiums. To qualify for the credit, employers must employ fewer than 25 full-time equivalent employees (excluding certain employees, such as business owners and their family 26 26 U.S.C.
45R. Small Employer Tax Credit
Page 12 GAO-15-312 Affordability of Health Insurance members), and pay average annual wages per employee of less than $50,800 per year in 2014. The amount of the credit depends on several factors, such as the number of full-time equivalent employees and their total annual wages. In addition, the amount of the credit is limited if the premiums paid by an employer are more than the state’s average small group market premiums, as determined by HHS. Employers may claim the small employer tax credit for up to 6 years—the initial 4 years from 2010 through 2013 and, starting in 2014, any 2 consecutive years if they buy insurance through the Small Business Health Option Programs (SHOP).
PPACA required the establishment of SHOPs in each state by January 1, 2014, to allow small employers to compare available health insurance options in their states and facilitate the enrollment of their employees in coverage. In states electing not to establish and operate a state-based SHOP, PPACA required the federal government to establish and operate a federally facilitated SHOP in the state.27 Starting in 2014, employers that wanted to claim the small employer tax credit had to enroll their employees through the SHOP exchanges.
Early evidence suggests that the APTC likely contributed to an expansion of health insurance coverage because it significantly reduced the cost of premiums for those eligible, though there are limitations to measuring the effects of the APTC using currently available data. In contrast, few employers claimed the small employer tax credit, limiting its effect on health insurance coverage. 27 In 2014, 18 states chose to operate state-based SHOPs while 33 states opted for a federally facilitated SHOP. Early Evidence Suggests That While the APTC Likely Contributed to an Expansion of Coverage, the Small Employer Tax Credit Has Had Little Effect
Page 13 GAO-15-312 Affordability of Health Insurance Early evidence suggests that the APTC likely contributed to an expansion in health insurance coverage. We identified three surveys that estimated the uninsured rate by household income. Although limitations exist in measuring the direct, causal effects of the APTC on health insurance coverage using currently available data, these surveys can be used to make early observations about changes in the rate of uninsured. They found that the uninsured rate declined among households with incomes between 139 and 400 percent of the FPL—that is, households financially eligible for the APTC in all states (see table 3).
For example, one study found that the rate of uninsured among individuals with household incomes between 139 and 400 percent of the FPL fell 9 percentage points between January 1, 2012, and June 30, 2014, in Medicaid expansion states.28 Further, the results from this survey found that gains in insurance coverage were statistically significant for individuals in this income bracket regardless of the states’ Medicaid expansion decisions. 28 B. D. Sommers, T. Musco, K. Finegold, M. Z., Gunja, et al. “Health Reform and Changes in Health Insurance Coverage in 2014,” The New England Journal of Medicine, vol.
371, no. 9 (Aug. 28, 2014).
The APTC Likely Contributed to an Expansion of Coverage by Reducing the Cost of Health Insurance Premiums to Those Eligible
Page 14 GAO-15-312 Affordability of Health Insurance Table 3: Survey Estimates of the Change in the Percent of Uninsured Nonelderly Adults by Household Income As a Percent of the Federal Poverty Level (FPL) Survey States covered Time period Income categories, as a percent of the FPL Percentage point change in the rate of uninsured Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index a Medicaid nonexpansion states January 1, 2012, to June 30, 2014 Less than 139 percent of the FPL -3.1 139 to 400 percent of the FPL -5.5 Greater than 400 percent of the FPL -1.0 Medicaid expansion states January 1, 2012, to June 30, 2014 Less than 139 percent of the FPL -6.0 139 to 400 percent of the FPL -9.0 Greater than 400 percent of the FPL -0.7 The Commonwealth Fund Affordable Care Act Tracking Survey b All states July 15 to September 8, 2013, versus April 9 to June 2, 2014 Less than 138 percent of the FPL -11.0 138 to 249 percent of the FPL -10.0 250 to 399 percent of the FPL -2.0 400 percent of the FPL or greater -1.0 The Urban Institute Health Reform Monitoring Survey c All states September 2013 to September 2014 Less than 139 percent of the FPL -12.0 139 to 399 percent of the FPL -5.2 400 percent of the FPL or greater -0.2 Source: GAO analysis.
GAO-15-312. Notes: The three surveys cannot be compared directly because each survey covered different time periods, categorized respondents in slightly different income categories, and asked questions about individuals’ health insurance coverage slightly differently.
a B. D. Sommers, T. Musco, K. Finegold, M. Z. Gunja, et al., “Health Reform and Changes in Health Insurance Coverage in 2014,” The New England Journal of Medicine, vol. 371, no. 9 (2014). b S. R. Collins, P. W. Rasmussen, and M. M. Doty. Gaining Ground: Americans’ Health Insurance Coverage and Access to Care after the Affordable Care Act’s First Open Enrollment Period (New York: The Commonwealth Fund, 2014). c S. K. Long, M. Karpman, A. Shartzer, D. Wissoker, et al., Taking Stock: Health Insurance Coverage under the ACA as of September 2014 (Washington, D.C.: The Urban Institute, 2014). This expansion in health insurance coverage is likely partially a result of the APTC having reduced the cost of health insurance premiums for those deemed eligible.29 29 Other factors or provisions in the PPACA could have also affected changes in the rate of uninsured, including the requirement to maintain minimum essential coverage or pay a tax penalty (i.e., the individual mandate), the requirement that some large employers offer health insurance to full-time employees, or individual market reforms that prohibited issuers from denying individuals coverage and setting rates based on individuals’ health status.
As of April 19, 2014, HHS initially estimated that 8 million individuals (including dependents) had selected a health plan through either a state-based exchange or a federally facilitated exchange,
Page 15 GAO-15-312 Affordability of Health Insurance and most of them (85 percent) were deemed eligible for the APTC at the time that they selected a health plan.30 Among those who selected a plan through 1 of the 34 federally facilitated exchanges or the 2 state-based exchanges that used the federal website for enrollment in 2014 and were deemed eligible for the APTC (4.7 million individuals), the APTC reduced premiums by 76 percent, on average (see table 4).31 For those who selected a silver plan through these 36 exchanges and were deemed eligible for the APTC, the APTC reduced premiums the most—an 80 percent reduction.32 30 Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation, Health Insurance Marketplace: Summary Enrollment Report for the Initial Open Enrollment Period (Washington, D.C.: May 1, 2014).
As of November 2014, HHS reported that 6.7 million individuals had enrolled in a health plan through the individual exchanges, after accounting for effectuated enrollment—that is, individuals who had selected a plan and paid their premiums—and excluding enrollment in dental plans. Of these individuals, 85 percent were deemed eligible for the APTC. As of January 2015, however, HHS had not revised its summary statistics on the amount of APTC that eligible individuals had received or the amount that the APTC reduced premiums for those eligible.
Overall, most individuals who selected a plan through these 36 exchanges and received the APTC (69 percent) saw their premiums reduced to $100 per month or less ($1,200 annually or less), and nearly half (46 percent) had their monthly premiums reduced to 31 Department of Health and Human Services, Health Insurance Marketplace; and Department of Health and Human Services, Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation, Premium Affordability, Competition, and Choice in Health Insurance Marketplace, 2014 (Washington, D.C.: June 18, 2014). In its analysis of the amount of APTC that individuals received and the extent to which it reduced premiums, HHS included data from the 34 federally facilitated exchanges as well as 2 state-based exchanges—Idaho and New Mexico—that used the federal website, http://www.healthcare.gov, for exchange enrollment in 2014.
32 Department of Health and Human Services, Premium Affordability. Of those who were deemed eligible for an APTC when they selected a health plan through 1 of the 34 federally facilitated exchanges or 1 of the 2 state-based exchanges that used the federal website, http://www.healthcare.gov, for enrollment in 2014, most (76 percent) selected a silver plan, followed by 15 percent who selected a bronze plan, 6 percent who selected a gold plan, and 3 percent who selected a platinum plan. Department of Health and Human Services, Health Insurance Marketplace. Individuals with household incomes between 100 and 250 percent of the FPL—those eligible to receive both the APTC and the cost-sharing reduction subsidies—may have been encouraged to select silver because, by selecting a bronze plan, they would have become ineligible to receive the cost-sharing reduction subsidies.
Page 16 GAO-15-312 Affordability of Health Insurance $50 or less ($600 annually or less).33 However, results from an early survey and experts we interviewed suggested that the APTC may have been less effective in expanding health insurance coverage for individuals financially eligible for a smaller APTC amount and ineligible for costsharing reduction subsidies than for individuals eligible for a larger APTC amount as well as for cost-sharing reduction subsidies.34 33 Thirteen percent of individuals who selected a health plan through 1 of the 34 federally facilitated exchanges or 1 of the 2 state-based exchanges that used the federal website, http://www.healthcare.gov, for enrollment in 2014 and were deemed eligible for the APTC had their monthly premiums reduced to between $101 and $150 ($1,212 to $1,800 annually), and 18 percent had an after-APTC monthly premium amount greater than $150 (greater than $1,800 annually).
Department of Health and Human Services, Premium Affordability.
34 The survey examined changes in the rate of nonelderly uninsured adults by income and found that, between 2013 and 2014, the uninsured rate declined by 2 percentage points among those with household incomes between 250 and 399 percent of the FPL— individuals eligible for a smaller APTC amount and ineligible for cost-sharing reduction subsidies. By comparison, the uninsured rate declined by 10 percentage points among those with household incomes between 138 and 249 percent of the FPL—individuals eligible for a larger APTC amount as well as cost-sharing reduction subsidies. S. R. Collins, P.
W. Rasmussen, and M. M. Doty, Gaining Ground: Americans’ Health Insurance Coverage after the Affordable Care Act’s First Open Enrollment Period (New York: The Commonwealth Fund, 2014).
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