Turbo-Charging Consumer-Driven Health Plans with Tax Reform: Cost and Coverage Effects
HEALTH POLICY DISCUSSION

Recent research by University of Minnesota professors Stephen Parente and Roger Feldman finds that combining the most recent models of consumer-driven health plans with a reform of the tax treatment of health insurance would substantially increase overall health insurance coverage. They estimate that adopting the George W. Bush plan for a standard health deduction in 2009--which levels the playing field between employer-purchased insurance and individual insurance--could reduce the ranks of the uninsured by more than 20 million people. A different universal tax credit proposal by Senator Tom Coburn (R-Okla.) and several Senate colleagues would have similarly powerful effects in reducing the ranks of the uninsured. Parente and Feldman also find that better-designed consumer-directed health plans help reduce health care costs. At this event, Parente and Feldman will present findings from their most recent national simulation model of recent health insurance reform options. They have used five years of employer and health plan experience in their study, making it the longest-running economic analysis of consumer-directed health plan design.

Gary Claxton, director of the Kaiser Family Foundation's Health Care Marketplace Project; Anthony Lo Sasso, associate professor at the University of Illinois at Chicago; and Phil Ellis of the Congressional Budget Office will discuss this research and other early lessons of consumer-driven health experiments.

About the Author

 

Thomas P.
Miller
  • Thomas Miller is a former senior health economist for the Joint Economic Committee (JEC). He studies health care policy and regulation. A former trial attorney, journalist, and sports broadcaster, Mr. Miller is the co-author of Why ObamaCare Is Wrong For America (HarperCollins 2011) and heads AEI's "Beyond Repeal & Replace" health reform project. He has testified before Congress on issues including the uninsured, health care costs, Medicare prescription drug benefits, health insurance tax credits, genetic information, Social Security, and federal reinsurance of catastrophic events. While at the JEC, he organized a number of hearings that focused on reforms in private health care markets, such as information transparency and consumer-driven health care.
  • Phone: 202-862-5886
    Email: tmiller@aei.org
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    Name: Catherine Griffin
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