By Peter Hirschfeld
Vermont Public Radio, Sept. 9, 2013
Gov. Peter Shumlin said increases in the payroll tax will “play a major role” in the public financing system he wants to use to fund single-payer health care.
The public discussion over single-payer has taken a back seat of late to the health insurance “exchange” set to come online in the beginning of October. The new online marketplace, a product of the federal Affordable Care Act, will offer consumers a platform from which to comparison shop from a more strictly regulated slate of coverage options.
But even as the state launches a $6 million outreach campaign aimed at building awareness of “Vermont Health Connect,” as the exchange is being called, Shumlin said his administration still has its eyes on the single-payer prize.
“What (the exchange) does is basically subsidize the current system, so that’s OK,” Shumlin said. “But like most things that come out of Congress, it doesn’t really solve the problem.”
In an interview this week on “City Room,” a public-access cable show, Shumlin said he’s still committed to delivering a publicly financed, universal health care system by 2017. And his administration, he said, is readying a financing plan that will rely in large part on the payroll tax.
“And the question is where do you have capacity in the other taxes — income, sales, room and meals, we all know what they are — to be able to integrate some of those taxes with a payroll tax to come up with a more fair system based upon ability to pay,” Shumlin said. “And that’s the challenge for the Legislature. And for us.”
The “challenge” of developing a plan looks to be falling more on Shumlin than on his Democratic colleagues in the Statehouse, who rejected a plan earlier this year to split responsibility for the development of a public-financing proposal between the legislative and executive branches.
The administration is spearheading that task now, with input from lawmakers, and will present a proposal to the Legislature in January 2015.
Shumlin said there’s no question that the payroll tax will figure prominently in the plan, but that his administration will have to figure out how to avoid the kind of economic disruption that would inevitably accompany a sudden increase in the surcharge on wages.
For companies that already provide health insurance to their employees, Shumlin said, the new payroll tax won’t be terribly jarring.
“Right now as an employer I can tell you that I pay something that I call a health care tax … And for businesses … that are already paying a health care premium … it’s not a big shock to tell us we’re going to be paying a payroll tax instead of a health care premium,” Shumlin said. “We don’t care what you call it, we’re already paying it.”
The problem with the payroll tax, according to Shumlin, arises when the new surcharge is assessed on Vermont companies that don’t already provide insurance.
“And the question is how to ratchet in the folks that are paying nothing slowly enough so it doesn’t hurt their bottom line,” Shumlin said.
Ultimately, he said that in the single-payer system, the state needs “to have everybody who’s in business in Vermont paying something.”
Shumlin said the job will be a heavy lift politically. But he said he’s convinced the debate is a winnable one.
“Opponents are going to say this will be the biggest tax increase in Vermont history. Fair enough,” Shumlin said. “But it’s going to be the biggest health care premium reduction in American history. We’re just going to swap a health care premium for a publicly financed health care premium.”
Peter Hirschfield writes for the Times Argus – Rutland Herald.
http://digital.vpr.net/post/shumlin-rely-payroll-tax-hikes
Shumlin plan to use payroll tax to fund single payer unpalatable to many in business
By Andrew Stein
Vtdigger.org, Sept. 9, 2013
If Gov. Peter Shumlin pursues a payroll tax to fund a publicly financed health care system, he will meet heavy resistance from one of the state’s most influential business groups.
Betsy Bishop, director of the Vermont Chamber of Commerce, says her organization and its members would not look favorably on a payroll tax.
“When you take away the decision-making process, but leave the payment still in place, it disconnects the employer from the payment,” she said. “What we’re interested in is continuing a system where employers, if they are paying for health care, have some level of control over what they are paying for.”
Last week, Shumlin told Times Argus Editor Steve Pappas that a payroll tax would be one of the vehicles for funding a single-payer, universal health care system in Vermont. Shumlin has been touting single payer for years, but he has provided little detail to date about how the state would pay for the system.
“Clearly, the payroll tax is going to have to play a major role,” he told Pappas.
Shumlin’s Office of Health Care Reform is working on a financing plan to raise an estimated $1.61 billion for the system, and the governor says he will hand the plan to the Legislature in January 2015. The state would not be eligible for a waiver from the Affordable Care Act to implement a single payer plan until 2017.
“Opponents are going to say this will be the biggest tax increase in Vermont history — fair enough,” Shumlin told Pappas. “But it’s going to be the biggest health care premium reduction in American history. We’re just going to swap a health care premium for a publicly financed health care premium.”
Jim Harrison, who runs the Vermont Grocers’ Association, which represents 700 retailers and 250 suppliers, says he is not surprised the administration is considering a payroll tax.
“It is logical a payroll tax would be under consideration because a lot of insurance premiums are paid for by employers,” he said.
Exactly how a payroll tax would affect businesses, however, depends entirely on how it would be leveraged.
“You could have a number of employers that could be dramatically hurt and others who could be substantially helped by such a system,” Harrison said.
Shumlin said the biggest shock would be felt by businesses that don’t currently contribute to their employees’ insurance.
“The question is: How do you ratchet in the folks that are paying nothing slowly enough so that it doesn’t hurt their bottom line?” he said to Pappas.
“We pay about 18 percent of payroll for health care premiums,” Shumlin said about his family business, Putney Student Travel. “You can call it a tax or a premium, but it’s coming out of our bottom line.”
This isn’t the first time a payroll tax has been proposed as the main funding mechanism for a single-payer system. Harvard economist William Hsiao recommended an 11 percent payroll tax on employers and a 4.5 percent payroll tax on employees in 2011. At the time, many employers balked at the idea.
Vermont Businesses for Social Responsibility supports a publicly financed health care system, and the organization’s team has been looking at various funding options for the past couple of years.
Dan Barlow, a lobbyist for the group, says, “There really aren’t that many buckets of money.”
“Taxing junk food is not going to pay for our health care system,” Barlow said. “The payroll system is one of those big buckets you can go to. The income tax is as well.”
David Coates, who chairs the 20-member Governor’s Business Advisory Council, says he prefers the payroll tax to an increase in income taxes.
“It’s one of the funding mechanisms that has to be on the table from my perspective,” he said. “It certainly beats the income tax. You have to look at whether something will be so onerous it will make us anti-competitive and drive people out of the state of Vermont. There are people saying that our income taxes are too high.”
Michael Costa, Shumlin’s health care financing czar, says every option is on the table.
“I think it’s really fair to say that the current system relies heavily on payroll contributions, and we certainly continue to take a hard look at this option,” Costa said. “I wouldn’t be shocked to see the payroll tax as a component of one or more of the plans.”
A plan, however, has not yet been developed, he said.
“A secret plan would make my life easier, and I’m really certain one does not exist,” Costa said. “Why? Because I asked during my job interview. It would make my life a lot easier.”
Shumlin also articulated this sentiment, in his interview with Pappas.
“If we could lift up the veil on this thing, and we had it all planned out, and we could tell you exactly how it was going to work, I wouldn’t be sitting here,” he said. “We would have done it already.”
Rep. Janet Ancel, who chairs the House Ways and Means Committee, said that she is unsure whether her committee will look at tax options this legislative session for single payer. Sen. Tim Ashe, who chairs the Senate Finance Committee, says his committee won’t vote on a financing plan before 2015.
Bishop of the Vermont Chamber said legislators ought to know what the system looks like before they vote on a financing plan for single payer.
“Before we can define what tax this comes from and how much money we can raise from a tax, I think the state needs to be very clear about what the definition of single payer is, and what the benefit package is, and who is eligible for it, and how much we are paying providers,” she said. “If you change any single one of those factors, the overall cost of the system changes.”