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Congressional Budget Office
Modeling the Effects of the Individual Mandate
on Health Insurance Coverage
Meeting of CBO’s Panel of Health Advisers
September 15, 2017
Alexandra Minicozzi
Unit Chief, Health Insurance Modeling Unit
1CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE
Individual Mandate Under Current Law
■ Unless exempt, people must obtain health insurance or pay a
penalty.
■ Penalties are the greater of two amounts:
1. A fixed charge ($695 in 2016) for every uninsured adult in the
household plus half that amount for each uninsured child, or
2. An assessment equal to 2.5 percent of the household’s income above
the filing threshold for its income tax filing status.
■ Penalties are subject to caps and prorated.
2CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE
Data on Collections and Exemptions
John Koskinen, Internal Revenue Service Commissioner, letter to Members of Congress (January 9, 2017),
www.irs.gov/pub/newsroom/commissionerletteracafilingseason.pdf.
Common exemptions were for:
■ People whose income was low enough that they were not required to file a tax return.
■ People whose income was less than 138% of federal poverty level and who were ineligible for
Medicaid because they lived in a state that had not expanded eligibility under the ACA.
■ U.S. citizens living abroad and certain categories of noncitizens, including unauthorized
immigrants, who are prohibited from receiving almost all Medicaid benefits and all subsidies
through the marketplaces.
■ People whose premium exceeded a specified share of their income (8.05% in 2015; indexed
over time).
14.3% 9.4% 4.8% 71.4%
Tax Returns With Both Primary and Secondary Filers Under Age 65, Tax Year 2015
Exempt Had Coverage
Nonfilers Filers
24%
Paid the
Penalty
3CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE
Distribution of Individual Mandate Penalty Payments by
Adjusted Gross Income, Tax Year 2015
Adjusted Gross Income
Income Group’s Share of
Individual Mandate
Penalty Payments
$100,000 or more 14%
$50,000 to $99,999 28%
Under $50,000 58%
Internal Revenue Service, “Individual Income and Tax Data, by State and Size of Adjusted Gross Income, Total Files, All States,”
www.irs.gov/statistics/soi-tax-stats-historic-table-2.
4CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE
Timeline of Key Developments Related to the
Individual Mandate
SUPREME COURT DECISION
MAKING MEDICAID
EXPANSION OPTIONAL OPEN ENROLLMENT 2014
OPEN ENROLLMENT 2015
DEADLINE FOR FILING 2014
TAXES (PENALTY LARGER OF
$95/ADULT OR 1% OF
INCOME)
OPEN ENROLLMENT 2016
DEADLINE FOR FILING 2015
TAXES (PENALTY LARGER OF
$325/ADULT OR 2% OF
INCOME)
OPEN ENROLLMENT 2017
DEADLINE FOR FILING 2016
TAXES (PENALTY LARGER OF
$695/ADULT OR 2.5% OF
INCOME)
2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
5CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE
Theoretical Framework for the Individual Mandate
■ Estimates of changes in coverage produced by CBO’s Health Insurance
Simulation Model (HISIM) are determined by shifts in the price of
insurance and individuals’ responsiveness to those shifts (price
elasticities).
■ Nonfinancial factors are translated into dollar amounts that shift
prices.
Shift in the Effective Price From the Individual Mandate:
Shift in Effective Price = Effective Penalty + Shift Attributable to Nonfinancial Factors
Statutory Penalty Amount * Probability That Penalty is Collected
6CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE
Theoretical Framework for the Individual Mandate
(Continued)
Nonfinancial factors include:
■ Compliance effect. People tend to comply with laws.
■ Loss aversion. People respond more to penalties than to
subsidies.
■ Social norm. Decision to obtain coverage is influenced by
peers and the prevailing social norm that directs everyone to
obtain health insurance.
David Auerbach and others, Will Health Insurance Mandates Increase Coverage? Synthesizing Perspectives from Health, Tax, and
Behavioral Economics, Working Paper 2010-05 (Congressional Budget Office, August 2010), www.cbo.gov/publication/21600.
7CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE
Prior Empirical Evidence on the Effects of the
Individual Mandate
Key provisions of Massachusetts health care reform in 2006:
■ Required residents over age 18 to have insurance or pay a penalty,
■ Created a subsidized health insurance exchange, and
■ Expanded Medicaid eligibility.
Coverage effects of Massachusetts health care reform:
■ Substantial increase in the rate of insurance and a decline in the
overall uninsured rate (Long and Stockley 2011).
■ Increase in enrollment of low-income parents who were eligible for
Medicaid before the law was enacted (Sonier, Boudreaux, and
Blewett 2013).
8CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE
Modeling Coverage Changes in HISIM
Nonfinancial factors are translated into price changes in HISIM.
Factors Unrelated to
the Mandate
Factors Related to
the Mandate
– Increased outreach
and marketing for
nongroup insurance
– Easier shopping and
enrollment for
nongroup insurance
– Ease of Medicaid
sign-up
– Compliance effect
– Loss aversion
– Social norm
– Reduced stigma
associated with
Medicaid
– Greater awareness
about eligibility for
subsidies
9CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE
Calibrating the Price Shift From Nonfinancial Factors
Related to the Mandate
■ Before the ACA was enacted, CBO relied heavily on evidence from
Massachusetts.
■ CBO continues to calibrate HISIM annually to incorporate new
information on:
– Coverage,
– Price changes and price elasticities, and
– Effects of nonfinancial factors on coverage.
10CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE
Health Insurance Coverage for People Under Age 65 in 2026
Congressional Budget Office, “Repeal the Individual Health Insurance Mandate,” in Options for Reducing the Deficit: 2017 to 2026 (December 2016),
p 237, www.cbo.gov/publication/52142. This budget option was estimated using the March 2016 baseline.
-2
-6
-7
15
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
160
Employment-
Based
Coverage
Nongroup
Coverage
Medicaid
and CHIP
Other Uninsured
If Individual Mandate
Was Repealed
Under Current Law
Millions of People
11CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE
Recent Empirical Evidence on the Effects of the
Individual Mandate
Disentangling the ACA-related causes of insurance coverage increases:
Sample: 2012–2015 American Community Survey repeated cross-sections
Specification:
■ Difference-in-differences with fixed effects for geographic areas and for income
groups, and
■ Controls for demographics and local unemployment.
Outcome Variable: Probability of being uninsured
Explanatory Variables:
■ Medicaid eligibility (previously eligible, newly eligible, and eligible because of their
state’s early expansion),
■ Size of nongroup premium subsidy, and
■ Size of potential tax penalty under the individual mandate.
Molly Frean, Jonathan Gruber, and Benjamin D. Sommers, “Premium Subsidies, the Mandate, and Medicaid Expansion: Coverage Effects of
the Affordable Care Act,” Journal of Health Economics, vol. 53 (May 2017), pp. 72–86, http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jhealeco.2017.02.004.
12CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE
Recent Empirical Evidence on the Effects of the
Individual Mandate (Continued)
Subsidies for Nongroup
Insurance
Medicaid Eligibility:
Previously Eligible
Medicaid Eligibility: Newly
Eligible
0%
1%
2%
3%
4%
5%
6%
7%
40%
24%
17%
6%
13%
– Increased outreach
and marketing
– Easier shopping and
enrollment in new
marketplace structures
– Mandate compliance not
directly related to penalty
amounts
– Regulatory protections in
nongroup market
– Macroeconomic changes
– Applicability of
mandate exemptions
– Family income
Nonfinancial Factors Affecting Coverage Measurement Error
Medicaid Eligibility: Early Expansion
Unexplained by Authors' Model
Increase in the Rate of Insurance From 2012–2013
to 2015 for People Under Age 65
Change in Rate of Insurance
Molly Frean, Jonathan Gruber, and Benjamin D. Sommers, “Premium Subsidies, the Mandate, and Medicaid Expansion: Coverage Effects of
the Affordable Care Act,” Journal of Health Economics, vol. 53 (May 2017), pp. 72–86, http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jhealeco.2017.02.004.
Share of
Total
Coverage
Increase
13CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE
Interpreting the Analysis by Frean, Gruber, and
Sommers (2017)
■ All studies will have difficulty disentangling the ACA’s coverage
effects.
■ Caveats in interpreting Frean, Gruber, and Sommers (2017):
– How much of the unexplained coverage effect that they identified is
attributable to nonfinancial effects unrelated to the mandate?
– To what extent is the social norm effect of the mandate included in
their analysis of the coverage effect of the expansion of Medicaid
eligibility?
■ Are there additional data or research results that inform
estimates of the coverage effects of the mandate?
14CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE
Challenges of Using Historical Data to Project Effects of
New Policies
Repealing the mandate is not the same as never having had a
mandate.
■ How much will the knowledge about the benefits of having
health insurance, subsidies, and the enrollment process that
consumers have already gained affect their decisions in the
future?
■ How much has the mandate permanently changed the stigma
associated with Medicaid?
■ How much persistence in enrollment can we expect?
15CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE
Key Questions for Discussion
■ What does the existing evidence tell us about the long-term
effects on health insurance coverage of repealing the
individual mandate?
– On total coverage?
– On Medicaid, nongroup, and employment-based coverage specifically?
■ What does the existing evidence tell us about the short-term
effects of repeal?
16CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE
References
David Auerbach and others, Will Health Insurance Mandates Increase Coverage?
Synthesizing Perspectives from Health, Tax, and Behavioral Economics, Working Paper
2010-05 (Congressional Budget Office, August 2010), www.cbo.gov/publication/21600.
Molly Frean, Jonathan Gruber, and Benjamin D. Sommers, “Premium Subsidies, the
Mandate, and Medicaid Expansion: Coverage Effects of the Affordable Care Act,”
Journal of Health Economics, vol. 53 (May 2017), pp. 72–86,
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jhealeco.2017.02.004.
Sharon Long and Karen Stockley, “The Impacts of State Health Reform Initiatives on
Adults in New York and Massachusetts,” Health Services Research, vol. 46, no. 1, pt. 2
(February 2011), pp. 365–387, http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1475-6773.2010.01211.x.
Julie Sonier, Michel Boudreaux, and Lynn Blewett, “Medicaid ‘Welcome-Mat’ Effect of
Affordable Care Act Implementation Could be Substantial,” Health Affairs, vol. 32, no.
7, (July 2013), pp. 1319–1325, http://dx.doi.org/10.1377/hlthaff.2013.0360.

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Modeling the Effect of the Individual Mandate on Health Insurance Coverage

  • 1. Congressional Budget Office Modeling the Effects of the Individual Mandate on Health Insurance Coverage Meeting of CBO’s Panel of Health Advisers September 15, 2017 Alexandra Minicozzi Unit Chief, Health Insurance Modeling Unit
  • 2. 1CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE Individual Mandate Under Current Law ■ Unless exempt, people must obtain health insurance or pay a penalty. ■ Penalties are the greater of two amounts: 1. A fixed charge ($695 in 2016) for every uninsured adult in the household plus half that amount for each uninsured child, or 2. An assessment equal to 2.5 percent of the household’s income above the filing threshold for its income tax filing status. ■ Penalties are subject to caps and prorated.
  • 3. 2CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE Data on Collections and Exemptions John Koskinen, Internal Revenue Service Commissioner, letter to Members of Congress (January 9, 2017), www.irs.gov/pub/newsroom/commissionerletteracafilingseason.pdf. Common exemptions were for: ■ People whose income was low enough that they were not required to file a tax return. ■ People whose income was less than 138% of federal poverty level and who were ineligible for Medicaid because they lived in a state that had not expanded eligibility under the ACA. ■ U.S. citizens living abroad and certain categories of noncitizens, including unauthorized immigrants, who are prohibited from receiving almost all Medicaid benefits and all subsidies through the marketplaces. ■ People whose premium exceeded a specified share of their income (8.05% in 2015; indexed over time). 14.3% 9.4% 4.8% 71.4% Tax Returns With Both Primary and Secondary Filers Under Age 65, Tax Year 2015 Exempt Had Coverage Nonfilers Filers 24% Paid the Penalty
  • 4. 3CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE Distribution of Individual Mandate Penalty Payments by Adjusted Gross Income, Tax Year 2015 Adjusted Gross Income Income Group’s Share of Individual Mandate Penalty Payments $100,000 or more 14% $50,000 to $99,999 28% Under $50,000 58% Internal Revenue Service, “Individual Income and Tax Data, by State and Size of Adjusted Gross Income, Total Files, All States,” www.irs.gov/statistics/soi-tax-stats-historic-table-2.
  • 5. 4CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE Timeline of Key Developments Related to the Individual Mandate SUPREME COURT DECISION MAKING MEDICAID EXPANSION OPTIONAL OPEN ENROLLMENT 2014 OPEN ENROLLMENT 2015 DEADLINE FOR FILING 2014 TAXES (PENALTY LARGER OF $95/ADULT OR 1% OF INCOME) OPEN ENROLLMENT 2016 DEADLINE FOR FILING 2015 TAXES (PENALTY LARGER OF $325/ADULT OR 2% OF INCOME) OPEN ENROLLMENT 2017 DEADLINE FOR FILING 2016 TAXES (PENALTY LARGER OF $695/ADULT OR 2.5% OF INCOME) 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
  • 6. 5CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE Theoretical Framework for the Individual Mandate ■ Estimates of changes in coverage produced by CBO’s Health Insurance Simulation Model (HISIM) are determined by shifts in the price of insurance and individuals’ responsiveness to those shifts (price elasticities). ■ Nonfinancial factors are translated into dollar amounts that shift prices. Shift in the Effective Price From the Individual Mandate: Shift in Effective Price = Effective Penalty + Shift Attributable to Nonfinancial Factors Statutory Penalty Amount * Probability That Penalty is Collected
  • 7. 6CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE Theoretical Framework for the Individual Mandate (Continued) Nonfinancial factors include: ■ Compliance effect. People tend to comply with laws. ■ Loss aversion. People respond more to penalties than to subsidies. ■ Social norm. Decision to obtain coverage is influenced by peers and the prevailing social norm that directs everyone to obtain health insurance. David Auerbach and others, Will Health Insurance Mandates Increase Coverage? Synthesizing Perspectives from Health, Tax, and Behavioral Economics, Working Paper 2010-05 (Congressional Budget Office, August 2010), www.cbo.gov/publication/21600.
  • 8. 7CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE Prior Empirical Evidence on the Effects of the Individual Mandate Key provisions of Massachusetts health care reform in 2006: ■ Required residents over age 18 to have insurance or pay a penalty, ■ Created a subsidized health insurance exchange, and ■ Expanded Medicaid eligibility. Coverage effects of Massachusetts health care reform: ■ Substantial increase in the rate of insurance and a decline in the overall uninsured rate (Long and Stockley 2011). ■ Increase in enrollment of low-income parents who were eligible for Medicaid before the law was enacted (Sonier, Boudreaux, and Blewett 2013).
  • 9. 8CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE Modeling Coverage Changes in HISIM Nonfinancial factors are translated into price changes in HISIM. Factors Unrelated to the Mandate Factors Related to the Mandate – Increased outreach and marketing for nongroup insurance – Easier shopping and enrollment for nongroup insurance – Ease of Medicaid sign-up – Compliance effect – Loss aversion – Social norm – Reduced stigma associated with Medicaid – Greater awareness about eligibility for subsidies
  • 10. 9CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE Calibrating the Price Shift From Nonfinancial Factors Related to the Mandate ■ Before the ACA was enacted, CBO relied heavily on evidence from Massachusetts. ■ CBO continues to calibrate HISIM annually to incorporate new information on: – Coverage, – Price changes and price elasticities, and – Effects of nonfinancial factors on coverage.
  • 11. 10CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE Health Insurance Coverage for People Under Age 65 in 2026 Congressional Budget Office, “Repeal the Individual Health Insurance Mandate,” in Options for Reducing the Deficit: 2017 to 2026 (December 2016), p 237, www.cbo.gov/publication/52142. This budget option was estimated using the March 2016 baseline. -2 -6 -7 15 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160 Employment- Based Coverage Nongroup Coverage Medicaid and CHIP Other Uninsured If Individual Mandate Was Repealed Under Current Law Millions of People
  • 12. 11CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE Recent Empirical Evidence on the Effects of the Individual Mandate Disentangling the ACA-related causes of insurance coverage increases: Sample: 2012–2015 American Community Survey repeated cross-sections Specification: ■ Difference-in-differences with fixed effects for geographic areas and for income groups, and ■ Controls for demographics and local unemployment. Outcome Variable: Probability of being uninsured Explanatory Variables: ■ Medicaid eligibility (previously eligible, newly eligible, and eligible because of their state’s early expansion), ■ Size of nongroup premium subsidy, and ■ Size of potential tax penalty under the individual mandate. Molly Frean, Jonathan Gruber, and Benjamin D. Sommers, “Premium Subsidies, the Mandate, and Medicaid Expansion: Coverage Effects of the Affordable Care Act,” Journal of Health Economics, vol. 53 (May 2017), pp. 72–86, http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jhealeco.2017.02.004.
  • 13. 12CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE Recent Empirical Evidence on the Effects of the Individual Mandate (Continued) Subsidies for Nongroup Insurance Medicaid Eligibility: Previously Eligible Medicaid Eligibility: Newly Eligible 0% 1% 2% 3% 4% 5% 6% 7% 40% 24% 17% 6% 13% – Increased outreach and marketing – Easier shopping and enrollment in new marketplace structures – Mandate compliance not directly related to penalty amounts – Regulatory protections in nongroup market – Macroeconomic changes – Applicability of mandate exemptions – Family income Nonfinancial Factors Affecting Coverage Measurement Error Medicaid Eligibility: Early Expansion Unexplained by Authors' Model Increase in the Rate of Insurance From 2012–2013 to 2015 for People Under Age 65 Change in Rate of Insurance Molly Frean, Jonathan Gruber, and Benjamin D. Sommers, “Premium Subsidies, the Mandate, and Medicaid Expansion: Coverage Effects of the Affordable Care Act,” Journal of Health Economics, vol. 53 (May 2017), pp. 72–86, http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jhealeco.2017.02.004. Share of Total Coverage Increase
  • 14. 13CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE Interpreting the Analysis by Frean, Gruber, and Sommers (2017) ■ All studies will have difficulty disentangling the ACA’s coverage effects. ■ Caveats in interpreting Frean, Gruber, and Sommers (2017): – How much of the unexplained coverage effect that they identified is attributable to nonfinancial effects unrelated to the mandate? – To what extent is the social norm effect of the mandate included in their analysis of the coverage effect of the expansion of Medicaid eligibility? ■ Are there additional data or research results that inform estimates of the coverage effects of the mandate?
  • 15. 14CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE Challenges of Using Historical Data to Project Effects of New Policies Repealing the mandate is not the same as never having had a mandate. ■ How much will the knowledge about the benefits of having health insurance, subsidies, and the enrollment process that consumers have already gained affect their decisions in the future? ■ How much has the mandate permanently changed the stigma associated with Medicaid? ■ How much persistence in enrollment can we expect?
  • 16. 15CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE Key Questions for Discussion ■ What does the existing evidence tell us about the long-term effects on health insurance coverage of repealing the individual mandate? – On total coverage? – On Medicaid, nongroup, and employment-based coverage specifically? ■ What does the existing evidence tell us about the short-term effects of repeal?
  • 17. 16CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE References David Auerbach and others, Will Health Insurance Mandates Increase Coverage? Synthesizing Perspectives from Health, Tax, and Behavioral Economics, Working Paper 2010-05 (Congressional Budget Office, August 2010), www.cbo.gov/publication/21600. Molly Frean, Jonathan Gruber, and Benjamin D. Sommers, “Premium Subsidies, the Mandate, and Medicaid Expansion: Coverage Effects of the Affordable Care Act,” Journal of Health Economics, vol. 53 (May 2017), pp. 72–86, http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jhealeco.2017.02.004. Sharon Long and Karen Stockley, “The Impacts of State Health Reform Initiatives on Adults in New York and Massachusetts,” Health Services Research, vol. 46, no. 1, pt. 2 (February 2011), pp. 365–387, http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1475-6773.2010.01211.x. Julie Sonier, Michel Boudreaux, and Lynn Blewett, “Medicaid ‘Welcome-Mat’ Effect of Affordable Care Act Implementation Could be Substantial,” Health Affairs, vol. 32, no. 7, (July 2013), pp. 1319–1325, http://dx.doi.org/10.1377/hlthaff.2013.0360.