Posts Tagged ‘insurance regulation’

Health Care Surprise (but keep your eye on the prize)

Monday, February 8th, 2010

Yesterday, in a surprise move to many (though apparently not to Majority Leader Reid or Speaker Pelosi, who immediately issued statements of support) President Obama invited Congressional leaders from both parties to a televised half-day health care reform summit on February 25.

The summit appears to be a major effort by the administration to redirect the debate over reform.  With the main health reform storyline focusing on the food fight between the House and Senate over who doesn’t trust whom and who needs to Go First,  it’s no wonder Congressional leadership embraced the new direction.  A summit several weeks in the future gives them more time to work through their differences free from the daily white smoke watch.

The summit will also gives the administration an opportunity to highlight the many positive aspects of reform and to point out weaknesses and inconsistencies in Republican arguments.  (For example, how can Republicans attack health reform for reducing Medicare spending when their own proposal includes a far more draconian cut?) We saw versions of this dialogue when Obama engaged in a give and take at the Congressional Republican retreat a few weeks back.  Obama and Congressional Democrats can repudiate certain controversial provisions, such as the special Medicaid subsidy for Nebraska. The setting–live TV–directly answers the public’s concern about secret negotiations with a much more open and transparent discussion.

As was true at the Republican Congressional retreat, there is very little chance of substantive changes in position from either side.  Republicans believe they are winning the debate on health reform and so have little reason to shift gears as the election approaches.  And even if the Republicans were willing and the administration were tempted to cut a deal, it seems likely that any significant shift to the right would cost the administration more in Democrats’ support than it could ever pick up from Republicans, especially in the House.

The main downside risk is that the summit delays the timetable for enacting reform by several weeks, and possibly longer, if discussion continues beyond the initial meeting.  Getting a fix-it bill through reconciliation is not a fast or simple procedure, and budget rules make it harder as time goes on.  As the days of the Congressional session slip away and elections approach, a crowded Congressional calendar and an aversion to taking tough votes right before facing the voters will add to the difficulty of getting reform done. But with health reform failing to command majority support from the public,  who lacks understanding of the bill and has concerns about the process, what’s there to lose?

Eyes on the prize

In the midst of all the political calculations and positioning, it is more important than ever to reassert how crucial covering the uninsured, slowing the growth of health care costs, improving the quality of care and ending abusive insurance industry practices is to our nation’s health and financial well-being.

Ultimately, this is not about Democrats or Republicans.  It’s not about achieving electoral advantage.  It’s about finally tackling one of the toughest social problems that confronts our country–one whose resolution has eluded policymakers for too many years.  It’s time to get reform done.

–Michael Miller, director of strategic policy

Of Doughnuts and Dragons: The Health Reform Insider

Wednesday, January 6th, 2010

Though a series of critical votes happened in the last month, not to mention the holidays, the issues that define negotiations between the House and Senate remain largely the same (check out our list if you need a refresher). Here’s an update on a few of those, and the process ahead.

The Overall Process
Reports that the House and Senate will bypass a formal conference committee and informally negotiate a bill instead have been circulating for over a month but, in one of those mysteries of the news cycle, the plan has recently become a hot topic.

The other important process piece (though also not really news) is that the Senate bill is expected to be the starting point for negotiations, and the House will likely have to wage a limited number of battles to make changes.  Defining what that list will include is The Task for House Democratic leaders now as they seek to hold together their own fractious caucus.  One item almost certain to make the list is closing the Medicare Part D “doughnut hole.”  Indeed, Senate leaders have already stated publicly their intention to close the Part D coverage gap—though how to pay for it remains a matter of intense debate, with House members arguing that funding should come from the drug industry, and the Senate perhaps less keen to go that route (as the specter of its summer deal with PhRMA looms.)

Financing
As we reported in December (and said many times before that), in the coverage debate, financing is the key.  Most observers believe that the excise tax on high-cost health benefits in the Senate bill will be further scaled back in negotiations with the House.  A critical and related issue—probably the most important one you never hear talked about–is one we flagged just before Christmas: How the price tag of reform gets calculated.

By our reckoning (see last week’s post), the Senate bill provides only a little over $600 billion in assistance to make coverage affordable for low- and moderate-income families, while the House comes in at around $900 billion.  Those extra $300 billion in assistance translate into a year’s worth of coverage (at the front) and more financial protection to low- and moderate-income uninsured people.

So the big financing questions left are: Will the House accounting prevail? And what, if anything, replaces the money lost from the excise tax? The answers to those questions determine whether there is any possibility of doing better than the Senate on critical affordability measures or by accelerating the implementation timetable.

Exchange Exchange
It looks now like the House is going to make a major push to swap out the Senate proposal for state-based insurance Exchanges in favor of a national Exchange as in the House bill.   (States could still opt to run their own if they met federal standards.)  With that in mind, here’s a brief overview of the pros and cons of state and federal Exchanges.

A national Exchange benefits from uniformity and is likely to have lower administrative costs than 50 state Exchanges would. A national Exchange also reduces the problems that could stem from state governments being unable or unwilling to take on the new responsibilities envisioned in the Senate bill. It’s also possible that a national Exchange would have somewhat better negotiating leverage with national insurance plans, at least in small states.

But the price tag difference between a national Exchange and state Exchanges is likely less than many proponents of a national Exchange who tout a federal model’s savings believe.  The bulk of health care costs are determined by underlying local conditions, and a national Exchange will have little influence over those factors.  In addition, while it’s likely that states will vary in how well they rise to the new challenge, at least some are likely to do an excellent job.  If a future federal administration were to be hostile to health reform, the entire Exchange for the whole country could be undermined; recall that this was a problem for many executive agencies in the previous administration.

Finally, a national Exchange is no more a safeguard against the influence of the health care industry than are state Exchanges.  In fact, the geographic remoteness of Washington from most of the country poses no real obstacle to special interests seeking to influence decisions, but does limit the ability of consumers to engage directly in the decision-making process or hold decision-makers accountable.

In the end, state versus national Exchange is of less importance than are the rules under which any Exchanges must operate and the underlying structure of insurance regulation.  So for example, a bill should ensure that there is no conflict of interest in Exchange governance and that business is conducted subject to open meeting laws, as well as provide for consumer representation in Exchange governance.

It is also important not to carve insurance markets up into distinct pieces: for instance, not to split up non-group and small-group insurance, or allow separate risk pools to operate both within and outside the Exchange. The bill should also empower the Exchange to exclude insurers if it is determined that they do not meet standards for providing good value.

On many of these issues, the House does in fact do better than the Senate, as well as on matters  of insurance regulation such as limiting rate variation based on age and clearly eliminating annual and lifetime limits on coverage.

Bottom line? If the House wants to fight about Exchanges, they should focus on the issues that matter most.

Immigrant access
Discrimination against immigrants remains a problematic aspect of reform, but the Senate seemed to make progress as reports indicate that leadership agreed to eliminate the ban on federal Medicaid matching funds for immigrants who have been in the country for less than five years.

We hope that, in negotiations,  the House will match the Senate’s willingness to remove the “5-year bar,” but won’t trade this progress for legal immigrants for its rightful opposition to the Senate proposal to bar undocumented immigrants from the Exchange, even when paying entirely with their own money—a provision supported by the Obama administration.

It’s also unclear just how many states would take advantage of the new matching funds option when, by doing nothing, they can leave the entire cost of covering low-income recent immigrants to the federal government.  The only fair alternative would be to give legal immigrants equal access to Medicaid, but state-based opposition to this fix has proved insurmountable thus far.

Next Dragon in the RoadDragon
Though negotiations between the House and Senate are far from finalized, reform opponents are already gearing up for a multi-pronged attack on the legislation, including legal challenges, state constitutional amendments and ballot initiatives.

Those who argue that these challenges have little legal merit are missing a larger point.  This strategy is first a political one, and only secondarily aims to change the course of the short-run health care debate.

First, given the pace of implementation, the Presidential election of 2012 becomes pivotal.  A change of administration that year would likely cripple implementation, perhaps fatally.  Campaigns being developed now are largely geared toward building a base of activists for 2012.

Even if they are unable to unseat Obama, Republicans see health reform as a wedge issue they can use to regain control of Congress.  Failing that, by defeating some vulnerable and prominent supporters of reform, opponents hope to create a chilling effect that will dampen the willingness in Congress to pursue further reform.

What this means for reform supporters is that—far from final negotiations curtaining the show—a new act in the saga of U.S. health care reform  is about to begin.


–Michael Miller, director of strategic policy

photo courtesy  of austinevan at flickr creative commons

Public Option Post-Mortem

Monday, December 14th, 2009

public optionThe Huffington Post declared the public option’s time of death as 11:12 on 12/10/09–the time of a press conference in which Nancy Pelosi signaled her willingness to entertain a bill without the provision.   If that was the technical time of death, what was the cause?

Basically, the fate of the public option has always been bound up with the rules of the Senate and the willingness of the Senate to pursue a path that did not require 60 votes.  While there are 60 votes in the Democratic caucus, several members have staked unalterable opposition to a bill that includes a government-run insurance plan—in any form.

That means that to pass a bill with a public option Democrats had to either go the route of “budget reconciliation,” which requires only a simple majority, or take the “nuclear option” and change the rules of the Senate to bypass a filibuster. (You may remember that Republicans threatened the “nuclear option” when they controlled the Senate and Democrats were blocking a number of Bush nominees to the federal court, but there’s been no real discussion of amending Senate rules to make it possible to pass health care reform.)

While reconciliation remains a technical possibility, and has all along, the clock really ran out on it during health reform’s slow walk through the Senate.  When a bill finally cleared Finance, Majority Leader Reid had, in theory, a last chance to combine the HELP and Finance bills in a way that would move via budget reconciliation.

But major technical challenges, a lengthy process, and the perceived political liabilities to doing reform with a narrower base of political support closed the door on reconciliation, and with it, any real chance that the public option would make it through the process in any recognizable form (notwithstanding the compromise version included in the bill Reid brought to the Senate floor.)

Well before a group of conservative and liberal Democrats started meeting to discuss alternatives, and a bevy of liberal bloggers began to toll its death knells, the public option had been significantly compromised from the original vision.  That vision contained two key elements: Universal availability, and Medicare-based networks, pricing and administration.

Universal availability went first, with the public option restricted to those who would purchase coverage through the exchange.  Medicare-based pricing fell in the House when many members from rural districts opposed using Medicare as basis for payment.

What survived would have had, in the short run, a modest impact on health insurance, an impact that  with potential to grow over time. Without 60 votes in the Senate or an alternative path, the question has always been more when than if it would get removed.

What’s the alternative?
With the public option out, the question remains: What will take its place?  The Senate is remaining very close-mouthed about the details of the negotiated alternative pending a CBO score later this week.

Elements of the alternative appear to include creating a national network of not-for-profit health plans overseen by the Office of Personnel Management (The same office that oversees the federal employee health plan), funding for CHIP through 2015 (instead of the current 2013), stricter regulation of private insurance, e.g. requiring 90 cents of every dollar to be spent on health benefits, and reducing the Medicare eligibility age to allow younger people to buy in, perhaps starting at age 55.  A proposal to also expand Medicaid to 150 percent FPL, as the House bill does, was discussed but rejected.

Several House progressives signaled that they would be prepared to entertain a Medicare expansion as an alternative to the public option, where the idea has long been popular.

But even before the deal has become available for public inspection it has taken fire from hospitals and doctors.  One Dem and an increasingly infamous Independent who negotiated the deal have started backing away from it, leaving its fate very much in doubt.  (Ironically, the only thing that could possibly resurrect the public option is if the conservative Democrats become too intransigent, forcing Senate leadership to reconsider budget reconciliation despite its difficulties.)

The Road, and November baseball
Little time remains to close a deal if the Senate intends, as it says, to complete their work before Santa’s circumnavigation.  Senate rules require a certain amount of time to elapse before the motion to halt debate can be acted on, so unless we see both the public option compromise and the Senate “Manager’s amendment” this week, it’s likely that the Christmas deadline will slip.  Once the Senate does act, there will be enormous pressure to seal a deal with the House, and fast.

There has been a lot of speculation this past week over whether Congress will bypass the conference committee process altogether, instead having the two chambers informally negotiate a small number of amendments that the House would pass and send back to the Senate for concurrence.  Failing that, leadership is seeking a very compressed conference process—Speaker Pelosi has said she thought they could do it in 48 hours.

While the pressure to wrap up is undeniable, the significant gulf between the House and Senate on financing, affordability, abortion, employer responsibility, and access for immigrants will make reaching a quick conclusion difficult.  (See our rundown of the issue gaps in last week’s Insider.)

President Obama wants health reform done before the State of the Union address and he may push the address into February to make that possible. Kind of like November baseball, but less hats.

–Michael Miller, director of strategic policy

photo courtesy of aflcio2008 on flickr