The Congressional Budget Office estimated the fines will raise around $36
billion over 10 years. Senate aides said the penalties would be modeled on the
approach taken by
In a revamped health care system envisioned by lawmakers, people would be
required to carry health insurance just like motorists must get auto coverage
now. The government would provide subsidies for the poor and many middle-class
families, but those who still refuse to sign up would face penalties.
Called "shared responsibility payments," the fines would be set at
least at half the cost of basic medical coverage, according to the legislation.
The goal is to nudge people to sign up for coverage when they are healthy, not
wait until they get sick.
In 2008, employer-provided coverage averaged $12,680 a year for a family
plan and $4,704 for individual coverage, according to the Kaiser Family
Foundation's annual survey. Senate aides, who spoke on condition of anonymity
because they were not authorized to speak publicly, said the cost of the
federal plan would be lower but declined to provide specifics.
The legislation would exempt certain hardship cases from fines. The fines
would be collected through the income tax system.
The new proposals were released as Congress neared the end of a weeklong
July 4 break, with lawmakers expected to quickly take up health care
legislation when they return to
Obama wants a bill this year that would provide coverage to the nearly 50
million Americans who lack it and reduce medical costs.
In a statement, Obama welcomed the legislation, saying it "reflects
many of the principles I've laid out, such as reforms that will prohibit
insurance companies from refusing coverage for people with pre-existing
conditions and the concept of insurance exchanges where individuals can find
affordable coverage if they lose their jobs, move or get sick."
The Senate Health Education, Labor and Pensions bill also calls for a
government-run insurance option to compete with private plans as well as a
$750-per-worker annual fee on larger companies that do not offer coverage to
employees.
Sens. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., and Christopher Dodd, D-Conn., said in a
letter to colleagues that their revised plan would cost dramatically less than an
earlier, incomplete proposal and help show the way toward coverage for 97
percent of all Americans.
In a conference call with reporters, Dodd said the revised bill had brought
"historic reform of health care" closer. He said the bill's public
option will bring coverage and benefit decisions driven "not by what
generates the biggest profits, but by what works best for American
families."
The Congressional Budget Office, in an analysis released Thursday evening,
put the net cost of the proposal at $597 billion over 10 years, down from $1
trillion two weeks ago. Coverage expansions worth $645 billion would be partly
offset by savings of $48 billion, the estimate said.
However, the total cost of legislation will rise considerably once
provisions are added to subsidize health insurance for the poor through
Medicaid. Those additions, needed to ensure coverage for nearly all
The Health Committee could complete its portion of the bill as soon as next
week, and the presence of a government health insurance option virtually
assures a party-line vote.
In the Senate, the Finance Committee version of the bill is unlikely to
include a government-run insurance option. Bipartisan negotiations are centered
on a proposal for a nonprofit insurance cooperative as a competitor to private
companies.
Three committees are collaborating in the House on legislation expected to
come to a vote by the end of July. That measure is certain to include a
government-run insurance option.
At their heart, all the bills would require insurance companies to sell coverage to any applicant, without charging higher premiums for pre-existing medical conditions. The poor and some middle-class families would qualify for government subsidies to help with the cost of coverage. The government's costs would be covered by a combination of higher taxes and cuts in projected Medicare and Medicaid spending.
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