Lawmakers Call for Permanent Expansion of Healthcare Credits
Lawmakers Call for Permanent Expansion of Healthcare Credits
- AuthorsUnderwood, Rep. LaurenAllred, Rep. ColinAxne, Rep. Cynthia "Cindy"Blumenauer, Rep. EarlBonamici, Rep. SuzanneCasten, Rep. SeanCohen, Rep. SteveCraig, Rep. Angie DawnCrow, Rep. JasonDavis, Rep. Danny K.DeFazio, Rep. Peter A.Deutch, Theodore E.Gallego, Rep. RubenHayes, Rep. JahanaHorsford, Rep. StevenJackson Lee, Rep. SheilaKuster, Rep. Ann M.Lawson, Rep. Al, Jr.Levin, Rep. MikeMalinowski, Rep. TomMaloney, Rep. Carolyn B.McCollum, Rep. BettyMrvan, Rep. Frank J.Pappas, Rep. ChrisPorter, Rep. KatieRice, Rep. Kathleen M.Roybal-Allard, Rep. LucilleScanlon, Rep. Mary GaySchrier, Rep. KimSewell, Rep. Terri A.Slotkin, Rep. ElissaSoto, Rep. DarrenStrickland, Rep. MarilynTitus, Rep. DinaTorres, Rep. RitchieTrahan, Rep. LoriTrone, Rep. David J.Wild, Rep. SusanWilliams, Rep. Nikema
- Institutional AuthorsU.S. House of Representatives
- Subject Area/Tax Topics
- Industry GroupsHealth careInsurance
- Jurisdictions
- Tax Analysts Document Number2021-33474
- Tax Analysts Electronic Citation2021 TNTF 166-17
August 26, 2021
The Honorable Nancy Pelosi
Speaker
United States House of Representatives
Washington, DC 20515
The Honorable Charles E. Schumer
Majority Leader
United States Senate
Washington, DC 20510
The Honorable John A. Yarmuth
Chairman
The Committee on the Budget
United States House of Representatives
Washington, DC 20515
The Honorable Bernie Sanders
Chairman
The Committee on the Budget
United States Senate
Washington, DC 20515
The Honorable Richard E. Neal
Chairman
The Committee on Ways and Means
United States House of Representatives
Washington, DC 20515
The Honorable Ron Wyden
Chairman
The Committee on Finance
United States Senate
Washington, DC 20515
Dear Speaker Pelosi, Majority Leader Schumer, Chairman Yarmuth, Chairman Sanders, Chairman Neal, and Chairman Wyden,
As you work to develop the reconciliation package, we urge you to make permanent the advance premium tax credit expansion that was included in the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021. Our communities are counting on us, their Representatives, to ensure that the high-quality, affordable coverage now available to them will not end when section 9661 of the American Rescue Plan expires in 2023 — we must keep our word to the people who trusted us to represent them in Congress and make permanent this historic step to lower out-of-pocket health care costs for individuals and families.
Thanks to the expanded advance premium tax credits in the American Rescue Plan, Americans across the country are already seeing their health care costs decrease substantially. During the Special Enrollment Period that ended on August 15, 2021, more than 2.5 million people signed up for new health insurance coverage through the Marketplace.1 Thanks to the more generous advance premium tax credits from the American Rescue Plan, enrollees have seen average net premium savings of more than $40 per month — a 40 percent reduction in their monthly spending on health coverage that means more money for groceries, school supplies, and essentials that families depend on.2 More than one-third of enrollees have been able to find plans for $10 or less per month with the expanded advance premium tax credits, bringing the economic security and health protections of coverage within reach for low-income and working-class people — some for the very first time.3
For some households, the advance premium tax credit expansion could provide savings of hundreds or even thousands of dollars per month: a family of four making $90,000 could see their premiums decrease by $200 per month, while an uninsured couple earning more than $70,000 could save more than $1,000 per month.4 These savings are immediate and provide financial relief at a time when hard-working families need it the most.
The expanded advance premium tax credits in the American Rescue Plan also promote health equity, a priority for the Democratic Caucus. Given that the uninsured rate for Black adults is 1.6 times higher than the rate for white adults, and the rate for Hispanic adults is 3.2 times higher,5 coverage gains will help to address the persistent disparities that can be seen in a wide range of health outcomes, from chronic disease incidence6 to maternal mortality.7
According to the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation at the Department of Health and Human Services, under the American Rescue Plan's advance premium tax credit expansion, 50 percent of eligible uninsured Hispanic adults will be able to find a zero-premium plan and 64.5 percent will be able to find a plan for $50 or less per month. Among eligible uninsured Black adults, 45 percent will have access to a zero-premium plan and 59 percent will now be able to find a plan for $50 or less per month.8 By temporarily expanding advance premium tax credits, the American Rescue Plan is reducing our nation's uninsured rate, providing substantive savings for individuals and families, and taking the most significant step towards health equity since the Affordable Care Act was signed into law in 2010.
But if we fail to act now to make the American Rescue Plan advance premium tax credit expansion permanent, Americans will lose the coverage they are now protected by, or once again face premiums that render coverage unaffordable and lead them to forgo insurance altogether. The gains we have made in closing coverage gaps in communities of color will be wiped out. The 2.5 million people who might now have health insurance for the first time in their adult lives will once again lay awake at night wondering if they are one illness away from bankruptcy.
We cannot afford to backtrack on the historic progress we've made for the American people: we must make the expanded advance premium tax credits in the American Rescue Plan permanent, and we must do it in the upcoming reconciliation package.
We have a once-in-a-generation opportunity to make high-quality care affordable and accessible to all; the American people are counting on us to get this done, and we must deliver. We stand ready to join you in working to include a permanent advance premium tax credit expansion in the reconciliation package and passing that package swiftly in the House and Senate. Thank you for your leadership in this urgent work to ensure that every American can afford the high-quality health care coverage that will protect themselves and the people they love.
Sincerely,
Lauren Underwood
Member of Congress
Colin Allred
Member of Congress
Cindy Axne
Member of Congress
Earl Blumenauer
Member of Congress
Suzanne Bonamici
Member of Congress
Sean Casten
Member of Congress
Steve Cohen
Member of Congress
Angie Craig
Member of Congress
Jason Crow
Member of Congress
Danny K. Davis
Member of Congress
Peter A. DeFazio
Member of Congress
Ted Deutch
Member of Congress
Ruben Gallego
Member of Congress
Jahana Hayes
Member of Congress
Steven Horsford
Member of Congress
Sheila Jackson Lee
Member of Congress
Ann McLane Kuster
Member of Congress
Al Lawson
Member of Congress
Mike Levin
Member of Congress
Tom Malinowski
Member of Congress
Carolyn B. Maloney
Member of Congress
Betty McCollum
Member of Congress
Frank J. Mrvan
Member of Congress
Chris Pappas
Member of Congress
Katie Porter
Member of Congress
Kathleen M. Rice
Member of Congress
Lucille Roybal-Allard
Member of Congress
Mary Gay Scanlon
Member of Congress
Kim Schrier, M.D.
Member of Congress
Terri A. Sewell
Member of Congress
Elissa Slotkin
Member of Congress
Darren Soto
Member of Congress
Marilyn Strickland
Member of Congress
Dina Titus
Member of Congress
Ritchie Torres
Member of Congress
Lori Trahan
Member of Congress
David Trone
Member of Congress
Susan Wild
Member of Congress
Nikema Williams
Member of Congress
FOOTNOTES
1Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. 2021 Marketplace Special Enrollment Period Report. (August 10, 2021).
2Ibid.
3Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. 2021 Marketplace Special Enrollment Period Report. (August 10, 2021).
4U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Fact Sheet: The American Rescue Plan: Reduces Health Care Costs, Expands Access to Insurance Coverage and Addresses Health Care Disparities. (March 12, 2021).
5Centers for Disease Control and Prevention National Center for Health Statistics. Health Insurance and Access to Care. (March 2018).
6U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office of Minority Health. Minority Population Profiles. Accessed April 22, 2021.
7Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Racial/Ethnic Disparities in Pregnancy-Related Deaths — United States, 2007–2016. (September 6, 2019).
8Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation Office of Health Policy. Access to Marketplace Plans with Low Premiums on the Federal Platform. (April 1, 2021).
END FOOTNOTES
- AuthorsUnderwood, Rep. LaurenAllred, Rep. ColinAxne, Rep. Cynthia "Cindy"Blumenauer, Rep. EarlBonamici, Rep. SuzanneCasten, Rep. SeanCohen, Rep. SteveCraig, Rep. Angie DawnCrow, Rep. JasonDavis, Rep. Danny K.DeFazio, Rep. Peter A.Deutch, Theodore E.Gallego, Rep. RubenHayes, Rep. JahanaHorsford, Rep. StevenJackson Lee, Rep. SheilaKuster, Rep. Ann M.Lawson, Rep. Al, Jr.Levin, Rep. MikeMalinowski, Rep. TomMaloney, Rep. Carolyn B.McCollum, Rep. BettyMrvan, Rep. Frank J.Pappas, Rep. ChrisPorter, Rep. KatieRice, Rep. Kathleen M.Roybal-Allard, Rep. LucilleScanlon, Rep. Mary GaySchrier, Rep. KimSewell, Rep. Terri A.Slotkin, Rep. ElissaSoto, Rep. DarrenStrickland, Rep. MarilynTitus, Rep. DinaTorres, Rep. RitchieTrahan, Rep. LoriTrone, Rep. David J.Wild, Rep. SusanWilliams, Rep. Nikema
- Institutional AuthorsU.S. House of Representatives
- Subject Area/Tax Topics
- Industry GroupsHealth careInsurance
- Jurisdictions
- Tax Analysts Document Number2021-33474
- Tax Analysts Electronic Citation2021 TNTF 166-17