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CRS Summarizes Healthcare Revenue Provisions in Reform Bill

JAN. 18, 2012

R41128

DATED JAN. 18, 2012
DOCUMENT ATTRIBUTES
Citations: R41128

 

Janemarie Mulvey

 

Specialist in Health Care Financing

 

 

January 18, 2012

 

 

Congressional Research Service

 

 

7-5700

 

www.crs.gov

 

R41128

 

 

Summary

The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA; P.L. 111-148 as amended) will, among other things, raise revenues to pay for expanded health insurance coverage. According to the Joint Committee on Taxation, these health-related provisions are projected to increase federal revenues by about $392 billion over 10 years.

The majority (64%) of the health-related revenues will come from individuals, largely from taxes imposed on higher income tax filers though the Medicare payroll tax and adding an additional tax on net investment income. A much smaller share of revenues derived from individual taxpayers will come from limitations on tax-advantaged accounts (such as flexible spending and health savings accounts) and on the itemized deduction used to pay for health care expenses.

The remaining approximate one-third (36%) of these health-related revenues will be derived from taxes and fees on health insurers, plan administrators, and health companies. Specifically, these revenues include

  • an excise tax on high-cost employer-sponsored health insurance;

  • an annual fee on health insurance providers;

  • an annual fee on manufacturers and importers of brand-name pharmaceuticals;

  • an excise tax on manufacturers and importers of certain medical devices; and

  • an excise tax on indoor tanning services.

 

The new law will also limit the deductibility of compensation for health insurance executives. While the provisions above are directly targeted toward firms in the health care sector, there is an additional provision that will affect all employers who provide prescription drug coverage to Medicare beneficiaries, which will eliminate the tax deduction for expenses allocable to the Medicare Part D subsidy to employers.

This report summarizes the health-related revenue provisions in ACA, their effective dates, and, where data are available, potential impacts of these provisions.

This report will be updated as legislative activity warrants.

                               Contents

 

 

 Introduction

 

 

 Health-Related Revenue Provisions

 

 

      Provisions Affecting Health Care Firms and Other Employers

 

 

           Excise Tax on Health Insurance Plans

 

 

           Annual Fee on Health Insurance Plans

 

 

           Annual Fee On Pharmaceutical Companies and Excise Tax on

 

           Medical Device Manufacturers

 

 

           Limitation on Deduction for Executive Compensation of

 

           Health Insurers

 

 

           Eliminate Employer Deduction for Retiree Prescription Drug

 

           Plans Eligible for Federal Subsidy

 

 

      Provisions Affecting Individuals

 

 

           Medicare Payroll Tax

 

 

           Unearned Income Medicare Contribution

 

 

           Tax-Advantaged Accounts and Itemized Deductions Used to Pay

 

           for Health Care Expenses

 

 

 Tables

 

 

 Table 1. Health-Related Revenue Provisions in ACA as Amended

 

 

 Table 2. The 40% Excise Tax on Health Insurance Coverage

 

 

 Table 3. Tax Filers by Adjusted Gross Income

 

 

 Table 4. Prevalence of Medical Expense Deduction by Age, 2008

 

 

 Contacts

 

 

 Author Contact Information

 

 

Introduction

The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA; P.L. 111-148 as amended)1 includes a number of provisions to reform the private insurance market and expand health insurance coverage to the uninsured. Private health insurance provisions that take effect prior to full implementation in 2014 include ending lifetime and unreasonable annual limits on benefits, prohibiting rescissions of health insurance policies, requiring coverage of preventive services and immunizations, extending dependent coverage up to the age of 26, capping insurance companies' non-medical administrative expenditures, guaranteeing coverage for preexisting health conditions for enrollees under the age of 19, and providing assistance for those who are uninsured because of a preexisting condition.2 Many of the other provisions will be fully implemented in 2014, when most individuals, large employers, and health plans are to meet certain coverage requirements. ACA will restructure the private health insurance market, particularly for individuals purchasing coverage on their own (who may qualify for premium credits) and small businesses. The new law will also expand Medicaid coverage to families with modified adjusted gross income (MAGI) up to 133% of the federal poverty level.3

To pay for expanded health insurance coverage, there are a number of health-related revenue provisions in ACA. These include taxes and fees on firms in the health care sector and other employers as well as additional taxes on upper-income individuals. The new law also makes changes to tax-advantaged health care accounts such as flexible spending and health savings accounts. This report details the changes in tax law that will be made as a result of the health-related revenue provisions in ACA.

Health-Related Revenue Provisions

Table 1 shows the implementation date and revenue projections for health-related revenue provisions in ACA. According to the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) and the Joint Committee on Taxation (JCT), these changes are projected to raise $391.7 billion in health-related provisions over 10 years. These revenues include excise taxes and limitations on employer deductions that would impact health insurers, health plan sponsors, and health plan administrators. As shown in Table 1, these employer-related revenue provisions represent about 37% of total health-related revenues in ACA. Over half of these revenues (54%) will be paid by high income taxpayers through higher Medicare payroll taxes and additional taxes on unearned income. Less than 10% would accrue due to modifications to current tax-advantaged accounts and deductions used for health care spending and coverage. Other revenues would come from penalties on individuals and employers.4

          Table 1. Health-Related Revenue Provisions in ACA as Amended

 

 ______________________________________________________________________________

 

 

                                                                       Share of

 

                                     Effective Date,  Increase in      Health-

 

                                     Taxable Years    Revenues         Related

 

                                     Beginning        (FY2010-FY2019)  Revenues

 

 ______________________________________________________________________________

 

 

 Provisions Affecting Employers            ---        $146.9 billion     37.5%

 

 

 Excise Taxes and Fees                     ---        $141.8 billion     36.2%

 

 

 40% Excise Tax on High-Cost Plans        2018         $32.0 billion      8.2%

 

 

 Impose Annual Fee on Health              2014         $60.1 billion     15.3%

 

 Insurance Providers

 

 

 Annual Fee on Manufacturers and          2011         $27.0 billion      6.9%

 

 Importers of Branded Drugs

 

 

 Annual Fee/Excise Tax on                 2013         $20.0 billion      5.1%

 

 Manufacturers and Importers of

 

 Certain Medical Devices

 

 

 10% Excise Tax on Indoor Tanning    July 1, 2010       $2.7 billion      0.5%

 

 Services

 

 

 Limitation on Employer Deductions                      $5.1 billion      1.3%

 

 

 Eliminate Deductions for Expenses        2013          $4.5 billion      1.5%

 

 Allocable to Medicare Part D subsidy

 

 

 Limit Deduction for Compensation to      2013          $0.6 billion      0.0%a

 

 $500,000 for Executives of Health

 

 Insurance Companies

 

 

 Provisions Affecting Individuals          ---        $244.8 billion     62.4%

 

 

 Medicare Tax                              ---        $210.2 billion     53.6%

 

 

 Medicare Payroll Tax                     2013         $86.8 billion     22.1%

 

 

 Medicare Contribution on Unearned        2013        $123.4 billion     31.5%

 

 Income

 

 

 Modifications to Tax-Advantaged                       $34.6 billion      8.8%

 

 Accounts and Itemized Deductions

 

 

 Limit Health Flexible Spending           2013         $13.0 billion      3.3%

 

 Accounts (FSAs) to $2,500

 

 

 Raise Penalty for Non-Qualified Health   2011          $1.4 billion      0.0%a

 

 Savings Account (HSA) Withdrawals

 

 from 10% to 20%

 

 

 Change the Definition of Medical         2011          $5.0 billion      1.3%

 

 Expenses for FSAs and HSAs

 

 

 Raise 7.5% Floor for Itemized Medical    2013         $15.2 billion      3.9%

 

 Expenses to 10% for Those Under Age 65

 

 

 Total Revenues Relating to Health Care    ---        $391.7 billion      100%

 

 ______________________________________________________________________________

 

 

 Source: Joint Committee on Taxation, March 20, 2010, JCX-17-10.

 

 Notes: Totals may not add to 100% due to rounding.

 

 

                              FOOTNOTE TO TABLE 1

 

 

      a Less than 0.02%.

 

END OF FOOTNOTE TO TABLE 1

 

 

Provisions Affecting Health Care Firms and Other Employers

ACA will impose the following taxes or fees on health insurers, plan administrators, and health companies:

  • an excise tax on high-cost employer-sponsored health insurance;

  • an annual fee on health insurance providers;

  • an annual fee on manufacturers and importers of brand name pharmaceuticals; an excise tax on manufacturers and importers of certain medical devices; and

  • an excise tax on indoor tanning services.

 

The new law will also limit the deductibility of compensation for health insurance executives. While the provisions above are directly targeted toward firms in the health care sector, there is an additional provision that will affect all employers who provide prescription drug coverage to Medicare beneficiaries.

The following section describes the current law (where applicable), changes to the law as enacted in ACA and amended by the reconciliation bill.

Excise Tax on Health Insurance Plans

Under current law, an insurance company is subject to federal income tax as either a life insurance company or as a property insurance company, depending on its mix of lines of business and on the resulting portion of reserves that are treated as life insurance reserves. Some non-profit insurers are exempt from federal income taxes.5 Also, under current law, employees are not taxed on the value of health insurance coverage provided by employers.6 Because the tax-exclusion on employer contributions to health insurance reduces the after-tax cost of insurance in ways that are not transparent, it may result in people with insurance obtaining more coverage than they would otherwise. Because the exclusion is not explicitly capped or limited, it does little to restrict the generosity of the insurance or any annual premium increases.7

To indirectly limit the tax exclusion for employer-provided health insurance coverage, ACA will impose a 40% excise tax on health insurers and health plan administrators for coverage that exceeds certain thresholds in 2018. The JCT and the CBO have included in their revenue projections an assumption that this tax will prompt employers to reduce the generosity of their health insurance coverage and thus health insurance premiums would increase taxable wages to compensate for reduction in health care benefits. They assume this will increase revenues by $32 billion between 2010 and 2019.

Under this provision, effective in 2018, the thresholds will be $10,200 for single coverage and $27,500 for family coverage, and will be indexed by growth in the CPI-U plus 1% in subsequent years. Coverage for individuals who are retired and ages 55 to 64, and workers engaged in high-risk professions, will be subject to higher thresholds ($11,850 single and $30,950 families). Also, employees in multi-employer (union) plans will only be subject to the family thresholds. Finally, there is also a provision to allow employers to adjust the cost of health insurance coverage (when compared with the thresholds) if the demographics of their workforce in terms of age and gender are different from that of a national risk pool.8

Health insurance coverage subject to the 40% excise tax in ACA will be broadly defined to include not only the employer and employee premium payments for health insurance coverage (including self-insured plans), but also premiums paid by the employee and the employer for dental and vision coverage (if this supplemental coverage is not part of a stand-alone package). In addition, tax-advantaged health-related accounts such as flexible spending accounts (FSAs), health savings accounts (HSAs), health reimbursement accounts (HRAs) and medical savings accounts (MSAs) are also specified as health insurance coverage and included in the threshold calculation. For these tax-advantaged accounts, the plan administrator (which is often the employer) will be subject to the excise tax. The excise tax will be levied on each of these components (i.e., health insurance, dental and vision, FSAs) based on their share of the total. This share will then be applied to the amount of the total contribution that exceeds the applicable threshold to determine the excise tax imposed on each component.

These thresholds will be further adjusted based on premium growth of the standard health insurance option under the Federal Employee Health Benefit Plan (FEHBP). If between 2010 and 2018 the cost of that plan rises more than 55% (or about 7% a year), the thresholds for the excise tax will be adjusted upward.

            Table 2. The 40% Excise Tax on Health Insurance Coverage

 

                                     In ACA

 

 ______________________________________________________________________________

 

 

                                           Provisions

 

 ______________________________________________________________________________

 

 

 General Threshold Amounts                 $10,200 single

 

                                           $27,500 family

 

 

 Insurance Coverage Subject                Health Insurance Coverage (excluding

 

 to the Thresholds                         stand alone dental and vision plans)

 

                                           FSAs, HSAs, Archer MSAs, and HRAs.

 

 

 Alternative Thresholds Applicable to      $11,850 single

 

 High-Risk

 

 

 Professions and Retirees Aged 55 to 64    $30,950 family

 

 

 Multi-Employer Plans (Unions)             Only subject to general threshold

 

                                           for family coverage (even for

 

                                           self-only coverage)

 

 

 Implementation Date                       2018

 

 ______________________________________________________________________________

 

 

 Source: Compiled by CRS.

 

 

It is difficult to determine how many insured individuals would be affected by the tax on high-cost plans because of uncertainty between 2010 and the effective date of 2018 regarding (1) employers' response to health care reform implementation in 2014, (2) changes to plan designs, and (3) private sector premium growth relative to FEHBP premiums. Using 2008 data (adjusted to 2010 levels), less than 7% of insured individuals would have been affected by these provisions if they were implemented in 2008.9 In 2019 and 2020, the thresholds will be adjusted upward by an index for general inflation (the Consumer Price Index (CPI)) plus 1% and CPI after 2020. To the extent that health care inflation continues to significantly exceed general inflation in subsequent years, a increasing share of the insured population could be affected by this provision after 2020.

ACA will also impose additional reporting requirements on employers providing health insurance coverage. Specifically, employers would be responsible for

  • determining the aggregate amount of health insurance coverage subject to the excise tax;

  • estimating the share of the tax allocated to the insurer and the plan administrator;

  • reporting these amounts to the insurer, plan administrator, and the Internal Revenue Service; and

  • reporting the total value of health insurance coverage subject to the excise tax on the worker's W2 form.

 

Employers who under-report the amount of the excise tax to be paid by insurers and plan administrators will be subject to a penalty. The amount of the excise tax will not be deductible from federal income taxes. According to the JCT, the 40% excise tax is projected to raise $32 billion over a 10-year period (see Table 1).

Annual Fee on Health Insurance Plans

As noted earlier, under current law, there are special rules for determining the taxable income of insurance companies.10 The rules differ depending on whether the company is a life insurance or a property and casualty insurer. ACA will impose a fee on all health insurers based on their market share of net premiums written, which will be effective beginning in 2014.11 The share of net premiums written subject to the fee will vary by the size of net premiums of an insurer. For example, there will be no fee on the first $25 million of net premiums of covered entities. For net premiums greater than $25 million and less than $50 million, 50% will be taken into account, and 100% of net premiums written in excess of $50 million will be subject to the fee. The fee will not apply to self-insured plans and federal, state, or other government entities. There are also additional provisions for tax-exempt insurance providers. Only 50% of net premiums for tax-exempt insurers will be taken into account when calculating the fee. The law would also exempt Voluntary Employee Benefit Associations and nonprofit providers for whom more than 80% of revenues are received from public programs that target low-income, elderly, or disabled populations.

The aggregate fee collected across all health insurers will equal $8 billion in 2014, $11.3 billion in 2015 and 2016, $13.9 billion in 2017, and $14.3 billion in 2018. After 2018, the fee amount is indexed to the rate of growth in premiums. According to the JCT, this fee is projected to raise about $60 billion over a 10-year period (see Table 1).

Annual Fee On Pharmaceutical Companies and Excise Tax on Medical Device Manufacturers

Under current law, there are excise taxes on sales by manufacturers of certain products. Certain sales are exempt from this tax.12 ACA will impose an annual fee on certain manufacturers and importers of branded prescription drugs (including biological products and excluding orphan drugs).13 The fee structure will be based on annual sales and will be set to reach a certain revenue target each year. ACA specifies that annual revenues collected by the fee will total $2.5 billion for 2011, $2.8 billion per year for 2012 and 2013, $3.0 billion for 2014 through 2016, $4.0 billion for 2017, $4.1 billion for 2018, and $2.8 billion for 2019 and thereafter. ACA specifies that these additional revenues should be transferred to the Federal Medicare Supplementary Insurance (Part B) Trust Fund. According to the JCT, this fee is projected to raise $27 billion over a 10-year period (see Table 1).

Also under ACA, a new excise tax of 2.3% will be imposed on the sale of medical devices by manufacturers, producers, or importers.14 This provision will exempt eyeglasses, contact lenses, hearing aids, and any device of a type that is generally purchased by the public at retail for individual use. The tax will apply to sales made after December 31, 2012. According to the JCT, this excise tax is projected to raise $20 billion over a 10-year period (see Table 1).

Limitation on Deduction for Executive Compensation of Health Insurers

ACA will impose limits on the amount of executive compensation that is deductible by health insurers. Specifically, health insurance providers where at least 25% of their gross premium income is derived from health insurance plans that meet the minimum creditable coverage requirements (i.e., covered health insurance provider) will not be able to deduct compensation above $500,000 per year. This income threshold will include deferred compensation. This provision will be effective for compensation paid in taxable years beginning after 2012 with respect to services performed after 2009. According to the JCT, this limitation on executive compensation is projected to raise $600 million over a 10-year period (see Table 1).

Eliminate Employer Deduction for Retiree Prescription Drug Plans Eligible for Federal Subsidy

Under current law, employers who provide their Medicare-eligible retirees with prescription drug coverage that meets or exceeds federal standards are eligible for subsidy payments from the federal government.15 The subsidies were equal to 28% of their actual spending for prescription drug cost in excess of $250 and not to exceed $5,000 (in 2006 dollars). These qualified retiree prescription drug plan subsidies are excluded from the employer's gross income for the purposes of corporate income tax. Employers are also allowed to claim a business deduction for retiree prescription drug expenses even though they also receive the federal subsidy to cover a portion of those expenses. ACA will require employers to coordinate the subsidy and the deduction for retiree prescription drug coverage beginning in 2013. The amount allowable as a deduction for retiree prescription drug coverage would be reduced by the amount of the federal subsidy received. According to the JCT, this provision is projected to raise $4.5 billion over a 10-year period (see Table 1).

Provisions Affecting Individuals

Medicare Payroll Tax

Under current law, employers and employees each pay a payroll tax of 1.45% to finance Medicare Hospital Insurance (Part A). ACA includes additional hospital insurance taxes on high-income taxpayers. Specifically, ACA imposes an additional payroll tax of 0.9% on high-income workers with wages over $200,000 for single filers and $250,000 for joint filers effective for taxable years after December 31, 2012. Married taxpayers filing separately are subject to a $125,000 threshold. The additional payroll tax only applies to wages above these thresholds. Thus, the hospital insurance portion of the payroll tax will increase from 1.45% to 2.35% for wage income over the threshold amounts. Additional revenues from this provision are transferred to the Medicare Hospital Insurance Trust Fund (Part A). According to the JCT, the increase in the Medicare payroll tax is projected to raise $86.8 billion over a 10-year period (see Table 1).

Unearned Income Medicare Contribution

ACA as amended imposes an additional tax on net investment income. The new law defines net investment income to be interest, dividends, non-qualified annuities, royalties, rents, and taxable net capital gains. It excludes distributions from a qualified annuity from a pension plan.16 Households with modified adjusted gross income (MAGI) under these thresholds will not be subject to the investment income tax. Specifically, effective for taxable years after December 31, 2012, the bill will impose a tax equal to 3.8% of the lesser of:

 

(1) net investment income for such taxable year, or

(2) the excess of MAGI17 over $250,000 for joint filers ($125,000 for married filing separately and $200,000 for all other returns).

 

It is important to note that if an individual has net investment income but does not have MAGI over these thresholds they will not pay the tax. Furthermore, proceeds from the sale of a principal residence are still subject to a partial exclusion from tax under current law.18 This new tax will apply to capital gains from the sale of a primary residence included in taxable income (capital gains above the exclusion amounts) only if the taxpayer's MAGI (including any capital gains) exceeded the above thresholds.19

While this tax is also applicable to income from estates and trusts, the active income from trade for self-employed and S-corporations would not be subject to the tax.20 For these entities, the tax will apply only to passive income and income related to commodity trading. There is also a special provision for the application of the tax to S-Corporations who sell their businesses.

The share of individuals subject to this tax will depend on the percent of tax filers with modified adjusted gross income above the thresholds reported above. Initially, a small percentage of tax filers are expected to be affected by these thresholds. Although data on the income distribution of tax filers based on MAGI are not publicly available, data are available for adjusted gross income (AGI).21 According to published data by the Internal Revenue Service reported in Table 3, about 1% of single filers have AGI over the $200,000 threshold. For married filers, the incidence of this tax is not as evident from the published IRS data.

           Table 3. Tax Filers by Adjusted Gross Income 2009

 

 ______________________________________________________________________

 

 

 Adjusted Gross Income        Married            Single             All

 

 ______________________________________________________________________

 

 

 All Returns

 

 Under $50,000                  21.7%             73.6%           45.4%

 

 $50,000 up to $75,000          23.9%              5.6%           20.1%

 

 $75,000 up to $100,000         20.2%              5.5%           13.4%

 

 $100,000 up to $200,000        26.8%              4.2%           16.3%

 

 $200,000 up to $500,000         6.5%              0.8%            3.9%

 

 $500,000 up to $1 million       1.0%              0.1%            0.6%

 

 $1 million and over             0.5%              0.1%            0.3%

 

 ______________________________________________________________________

 

 

 Source: Internal Revenue Service, Statistics of Income,

 

 Table 1.2 All Returns: Adjusted Gross Income, Exemptions,

 

 Deductions, and Tax Items, by Size of Adjusted Gross Income and by

 

 Marital Status, Tax Year 2009.

 

 

 Notes: The All category of Filers include some of the smaller

 

 filing categories such as Married filing separately, and surviving

 

 spouse. Also, this table represents Adjusted Gross Income and may

 

 slightly underestimate Modified Adjusted Gross Income would be higher

 

 because it includes foreign income.

 

 

As noted above, the threshold for married filers is $250,000. While IRS does not publish data specifically for this level, Table 3 does show that about 8% of married filers have AGI over $200,000. The share affected by the $250,000 limit would thus be lower than these percentages. Over time, however, since the thresholds are not indexed to inflation, a larger number of individuals are expected to be affected in the future. As shown in Table 1, the unearned income tax provision is projected to raise $123.4 billion in revenues over a 10-year period, nearly one-third (31.5%) of the health-related revenues in ACA.

Tax-Advantaged Accounts and Itemized Deductions Used to Pay for Health Care Expenses

There are a number of tax-advantaged accounts and tax deductions for health care spending and coverage that will be affected by the revenue provisions in Title IX of ACA. The following discusses these in greater detail.

Modifications to Tax-Advantaged Accounts

Under current law, flexible spending accounts (FSAs), health savings accounts (HSAs), health reimbursement accounts (HRAs), and Medical Saving Accounts (MSAs) allow workers under varying circumstances to exclude a certain portion of qualified medical expenses from income taxes.22 Health FSAs are employer-established benefit plans that reimburse employees for specified health care expenses (e.g., deductibles, co-payments, and non-covered expenses) as they are incurred on a pre-tax basis.23 According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) survey, 39% of all workers in 2010 had access to a health care flexible spending account.24 Each employer may set their limits on FSA contributions, with most employers setting the maximum contribution limit to $5,000. Beginning in 2013, ACA will limit the amount of annual FSA contributions to $2,500 per account and index for general inflation in subsequent years. Given that the average annual contribution was $1,426 in 2009,25 this provision will not likely affect the average contributor to FSAs. However, the maximum limitation will impact those who have high out-of-pocket expenses. According to JCT, this provision is projected to increase revenues by $13 billion over 10 years (see Table 1).

HSAs are also tax-advantaged accounts that allow individuals to fund unreimbursed medical expenses (deductibles, copayments, and services not covered by insurance) on a pre-tax basis.26 Eligible individuals can establish and fund accounts when they have a qualifying high deductible health plan and no other health plan (with some exceptions). Unlike FSAs, HSAs may be rolled over and the funds accumulated over time. Distributions from an HSA that are used for qualified medical expenses are not included in taxable income. Distributions that are not used for qualified medical expenses are taxable as ordinary income and, under current law, an additional 10% penalty tax is imposed for those under the age of 65. ACA will raised this penalty on non-qualified distributions from 10% to 20% of the disbursed amount effective in 2011.

Data are not available on the share of individuals taking HSA distributions for non-qualified expenses. However, account balances overall do increase significantly with the length of time the HSA is held. For example, in 2010, HSA balances for accounts held more than five years were $2,231 compared with $962 for those held for six months to one year.27 This would mean that, on average, the withdrawal penalty for non-qualified distributions for someone who held the account for more than five years would increase from $223 to $446 under ACA. According to the JCT, this provision will raise $1.3 billion over 10 years (see Table 1). While this does not raise a significant amount of revenue, it may discourage individuals from using the funds for non-qualified medical expenses and instead accumulate the funds for use in the future.

Effective in 2011, ACA also modifies the definition of qualified medical expenses. Under current law prior to ACA, qualified medical expenses for FSAs, HSAs, and HRAs could include over-the-counter medications. ACA restricts this practice and excludes over-the-counter medications (except those prescribed by a physician) as a qualified medical expense. According to the JCT, this provision will increase revenues by $5 billion over 10 years (see Table 1).

Modify Itemized Deduction for Medical Expenses

Currently, taxpayers who itemize their deductions may deduct unreimbursed medical expenses that exceed 7.5% of adjusted gross income (AGI). Medical expenses include health insurance premiums paid by the taxpayer, but also can include certain transportation and lodging expenses related to medical care as well as qualified long-term care costs, and long-term care premiums that do not exceed a certain amount. ACA will increase the threshold to 10% of AGI for taxpayers who are under the age of 65 beginning in 2013, this effectively further limits the amount of medical expenses that can be deducted. Taxpayers over the age of 65 will be temporarily excluded from this provision and still be subject to the 7.5% limit from 2013 through 2016.

Since the share of tax filers using the expense varies widely by age and income, this provision will adversely impact older households and those with lower incomes. While about 7% of all tax filers in 2008 (the most recent year for which published data are available) reported a deduction for medical expenses, 21% of tax filers aged 65 and older took the medical expense deduction (see Table 4) and their deduction is 43% higher than the overall average for all tax filers.28 In addition, according to the JCT, taxpayers with AGI below $50,000 accounted for 41% of those taking this itemized deduction for medical expenses.29

     Table 4. Prevalence of Medical Expense Deduction by Age, 2008

 

 ______________________________________________________________________

 

 

               % of all Tax Filers   % of Itemizers   Average Deduction

 

 ______________________________________________________________________

 

 

 Under 26              0.5%                13.6%            $5,514

 

 26 up to 35           2.6%                 9.9%            $4,097

 

 35 up to 45           4.6%                10.9%            $4,389

 

 45 up to 55           6.7%                13.8%            $5,117

 

 55 up to 65          11.2%                22.7%            $6,078

 

 ______________________________________________________________________

 

 

 Source: CRS Analysis of Statistics of Income data from IRS

 

 based on Table 2.6 Returns with Itemized Deductions Sources of Income,

 

 Adjustments, Itemized Deductions by Type, Exemptions, and Tax Items,

 

 by Age, Tax Year 2008.

 

 

Author Contact Information

 

Janemarie Mulvey

 

Specialist in Health Care Financing

 

jmulvey@crs.loc.gov, 7-6928

 

FOOTNOTES

 

 

1 Amended by the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010 P.L. 111-152.

2 CRS Report R41664, PPACA: A Brief Overview of the Law, Implementation, and Legal Challenges, by Hinda Chaikind et al.

3 CRS Report R40821, Medicaid and Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP) Provisions in America's Affordable Health Choices Act of 2009 (H.R. 3200), by Evelyne P. Baumrucker, Cliff Binder, and Elicia J. Herz.

4 For more information on penalties paid by employers, see CRS Report R41159, Summary of Potential Employer Penalties Under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA), by Janemarie Mulvey.

5 Joint Committee on Taxation, Technical Explanation of the Revenue Provisions of the "Reconciliation Act of 2010," as Amended, in Combination with the "Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act," JCX-18-10, March 21, 2010.

6 See CRS Report RL33505, Tax Benefits for Health Insurance and Expenses: Overview of Current Law, by Janemarie Mulvey.

7 See CRS Report CRS Report RL34767, The Tax Exclusion for Employer-Provided Health Insurance: Issues for Congress, by Janemarie Mulvey.

8 The national risk pool is based on the rates in the standard Blue Cross Blue Shield FEHBP health insurance plan.

9 Estimate based on Agency for Health Care Research and Quality (AHRQ) analysis of the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey Insurance Component (MEPS-IC) for CRS.

10 Subchapter L of the Internal Revenue Code.

11 See CRS Report R40834, The Market Structure of the Health Insurance Industry, by D. Andrew Austin and Thomas L. Hungerford, for information on market share of individual health insurance companies.

12 See Internal Revenue Code Chapter 32.

13 See IRC Notice 2011-92 for further information.

14 CRS Report R41278, Public Health, Workforce, Quality, and Related Provisions in PPACA: Summary and Timeline, coordinated by C. Stephen Redhead and Erin D. Williams.

15 Medicare Modernization Act of 2003.

16 As defined in IRC Sec. 401(a), 403(a), 403(b), 408, 408A, or 457(b).

17 Modified adjusted gross income is defined as adjusted gross income increased by the excess of foreign earned income (defined in IRC Sec. 911(a)(1)) over the amount of any deductions or exclusions disallowed under IRC Sec. 911(d)(6) when determining foreign earned income.

18 See CRS Report R41413, The 3.8% Medicare Contribution Tax on Unearned Income, Including Real Estate Transactions, by Mark P. Keightley for various examples of when this applies to home sales.

19 Gains from the sale of a house up to $250,000 for single taxpayers and $500,000 for married couples filing jointly are excluded from taxation if the taxpayer meets a use test (has lived in the house for at least two years out of the past five years) and an ownership test (has owned the house, also for two years out of the past five years). This exclusion can be used every two years.

20 Corporations may elect S-corporation status if they meet a number of Internal Revenue Code requirements. Among other things, they cannot have more than 100 shareholders or more than one class of stock. S-corporations are tax-reporting rather than tax-paying entities, in contrast to C-corporations, which are subject to the corporate income tax.

21 Modified adjusted gross income is defined as adjusted gross income increased by the excess of foreign earned income (defined in IRC Sec. 911(a)(1)) over the amount of any deductions or exclusions disallowed under IRC Sec. 911(d)(6) when determining foreign earned income.

22 See CRS Report RL33505, Tax Benefits for Health Insurance and Expenses: Overview of Current Law, by Janemarie Mulvey.

23 See CRS Report RL32656, Health Care Flexible Spending Accounts, by Janemarie Mulvey.

24 Bureau of Labor Statistics, Table 39. Pretax benefits: Access, private industry workers, National Compensation Survey, March 2010.

25 Mercer Human Resources Consulting, National Survey of Employer-Sponsored Health Plans, 2010.

26 See CRS Report RL33257, Health Savings Accounts: Overview of Rules for 2012, by Janemarie Mulvey.

27 Paul Fronstein, Health Savings Accounts and Health Reimbursement Arrangements: Assets, Account Balances, and Rollovers, 2006-2010, Employee Benefit Research Institute, January 2011.

28 CRS analysis of Internal Revenue Service, Statistics of Income, Table 1.3: All Returns: Source of Income, Adjustments, Deductions, Credits and Tax Items, by Marital Status, Tax Year 2008.

29 Joint Committee on Taxation, Estimates of Federal Tax Expenditures for Fiscal Years 2010-2014, December 15, 2010, JCS-3-10.

 

END OF FOOTNOTES
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