Quantifying Overinsurance Tied to the Tax Exclusion for Employment-Based Health Insurance and Its Variation by Health Status

The exclusion of employment-based health insurance from income and payroll taxes is thought to increase the generosity of insurance coverage and, in turn, increase the overutilization of low-value health care services. We examine this inefficiency of overinsurance by quantifying the change in expect...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bradley Herring PhD, Erin Trish PhD
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2019-12-01
Series:Inquiry: The Journal of Health Care Organization, Provision, and Financing
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/0046958019893857
id doaj-e5785ca2d7e34a7abcddde0239c76883
record_format Article
spelling doaj-e5785ca2d7e34a7abcddde0239c768832020-11-25T03:46:39ZengSAGE PublishingInquiry: The Journal of Health Care Organization, Provision, and Financing0046-95801945-72432019-12-015610.1177/0046958019893857Quantifying Overinsurance Tied to the Tax Exclusion for Employment-Based Health Insurance and Its Variation by Health StatusBradley Herring PhD0Erin Trish PhD1Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USAUniversity of Southern California, Los Angeles, USAThe exclusion of employment-based health insurance from income and payroll taxes is thought to increase the generosity of insurance coverage and, in turn, increase the overutilization of low-value health care services. We examine this inefficiency of overinsurance by quantifying the change in expected utility across 4 benchmark plans varying in actuarial value (AV) and focus on the distribution of each of these estimates across different groups of people varying in health status. Specifically, we quantify the changes in health care spending due to moral hazard and the changes in uncertainty tied to risk aversion using data from the nationally representative sample of adults with employment-based coverage from the 2007-2016 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey, and produce estimates of expected utility for 24 groups of people based on their age, gender, and preexisting conditions. Our model suggests an average preferred AV of 78% without the tax exclusion, with 29.0% of the population preferring a 60% AV, 6.5% preferring a 70% AV, 18.1% preferring an 80% AV, and 46.4% preferring a 90% AV. When incorporating the distortionary effect of the employment-based tax exclusion, the preferred plan increases to an 83% AV for low-income people (with 71.0% of the population preferring a 90% AV) and an 84% AV for high-income people (with 76.0% of the population preferring a 90% AV). We estimate that policy changes to make subsidies independent of a plan’s AV could result in increases in utility equal to about 2.7% of total health care spending, but with those net gains concentrated among the healthy.https://doi.org/10.1177/0046958019893857
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bradley Herring PhD
Erin Trish PhD
spellingShingle Bradley Herring PhD
Erin Trish PhD
Quantifying Overinsurance Tied to the Tax Exclusion for Employment-Based Health Insurance and Its Variation by Health Status
Inquiry: The Journal of Health Care Organization, Provision, and Financing
author_facet Bradley Herring PhD
Erin Trish PhD
author_sort Bradley Herring PhD
title Quantifying Overinsurance Tied to the Tax Exclusion for Employment-Based Health Insurance and Its Variation by Health Status
title_short Quantifying Overinsurance Tied to the Tax Exclusion for Employment-Based Health Insurance and Its Variation by Health Status
title_full Quantifying Overinsurance Tied to the Tax Exclusion for Employment-Based Health Insurance and Its Variation by Health Status
title_fullStr Quantifying Overinsurance Tied to the Tax Exclusion for Employment-Based Health Insurance and Its Variation by Health Status
title_full_unstemmed Quantifying Overinsurance Tied to the Tax Exclusion for Employment-Based Health Insurance and Its Variation by Health Status
title_sort quantifying overinsurance tied to the tax exclusion for employment-based health insurance and its variation by health status
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Inquiry: The Journal of Health Care Organization, Provision, and Financing
issn 0046-9580
1945-7243
publishDate 2019-12-01
description The exclusion of employment-based health insurance from income and payroll taxes is thought to increase the generosity of insurance coverage and, in turn, increase the overutilization of low-value health care services. We examine this inefficiency of overinsurance by quantifying the change in expected utility across 4 benchmark plans varying in actuarial value (AV) and focus on the distribution of each of these estimates across different groups of people varying in health status. Specifically, we quantify the changes in health care spending due to moral hazard and the changes in uncertainty tied to risk aversion using data from the nationally representative sample of adults with employment-based coverage from the 2007-2016 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey, and produce estimates of expected utility for 24 groups of people based on their age, gender, and preexisting conditions. Our model suggests an average preferred AV of 78% without the tax exclusion, with 29.0% of the population preferring a 60% AV, 6.5% preferring a 70% AV, 18.1% preferring an 80% AV, and 46.4% preferring a 90% AV. When incorporating the distortionary effect of the employment-based tax exclusion, the preferred plan increases to an 83% AV for low-income people (with 71.0% of the population preferring a 90% AV) and an 84% AV for high-income people (with 76.0% of the population preferring a 90% AV). We estimate that policy changes to make subsidies independent of a plan’s AV could result in increases in utility equal to about 2.7% of total health care spending, but with those net gains concentrated among the healthy.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/0046958019893857
work_keys_str_mv AT bradleyherringphd quantifyingoverinsurancetiedtothetaxexclusionforemploymentbasedhealthinsuranceanditsvariationbyhealthstatus
AT erintrishphd quantifyingoverinsurancetiedtothetaxexclusionforemploymentbasedhealthinsuranceanditsvariationbyhealthstatus
_version_ 1724505124594778112