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NATIONAL CENTER FOR POLICY ANALYSIS HOME / DONATE / ONE LEVEL UP / ABOUT NCPA / CONTACT The Cost of Health Insurance Mandates |
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| Wednesday, August 13, 1997 | |
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For more than 30 years, state legislatures have passed laws driving the
cost of health insurance higher. Known as mandated health insurance benefit
laws, they force insurers, employers and managed care companies to cover
- or at least offer - specific providers or procedures not usually included
in basic health care plans.
Who Pays for Mandated Benefits. Many employees believe their employers pay for the insurance they provide. However, economists recognize that employee benefits are a substitute for wages in the employee's total compensation package. Higher benefits often force employees to take lower wages whether they like it or not. A 1990 survey of the literature by National Bureau of Economic Research economist Olivia S. Mitchell found that the cost of mandated benefits is usually borne by employees in the form of reduced wages, reduced work hours or loss of employment. The Impact of Mandates. While mandated benefits mean that people with health insurance have more health care options, they also mean that fewer people are insured. When employers who canceled their employees' health insurance policies have been polled on why they did so, the majority claimed that it was because the price was too high. Lower-income employees are most likely to lose coverage. According to a 1989 study by health economists Gail Jensen and Jon Gabel, mandated coverage increases premiums by 6 to 8 percent for substance abuse, 10 to 13 percent for mental health care and as much as 21 percent for psychiatric hospital care for employee dependents. The Threat to ERISA. Since 1974, many large- and medium-sized employers have escaped the cost-increasing impact of state health benefit mandates by self-insuring under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act. As a result, thousands of employers have been able to offer health insurance policies tailored to their employees' needs and their companies' budgets. However, a number of proposals currently before Congress would impose new mandates at the federal level. For example, they would require coverage for mammograms for women under age 50, ban "drive-through" mastectomies and preclude managed care in many instances. Because the federal mandates would apply universally, self-insured companies would come under federal control. Conclusion. The real threat behind the Congress's newfound interest in mandating health insurance benefits is incremental rather than immediate. One or two federal mandates may not increase the cost of health insurance significantly but, as in the states, once the door is open every special interest will hurry through to besiege the legislature. When the legislators succumb and the dust settles, health insurance will cost more, employers and individuals will cancel more policies and Congress will face a growing uninsured "crisis" - a crisis largely of its own making. This Brief Analysis was prepared by NCPA President John C. Goodman and Vice President of Domestic Policy Merrill Matthews Jr. | |