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What Are Section 125 Plans and How Can They Be Used To Expand Health Coverage?. Lynn Quincy Mathematica Policy Research February 7, 2008. What Are Section 125 Plans?.
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What Are Section 125 Plans and How Can They Be Used To Expand Health Coverage? Lynn Quincy Mathematica Policy Research February 7, 2008
What Are Section 125 Plans? • IRS Code Section 125 allows workers to lower their taxable income by the amount of premiums paid for health insurance (and other qualified benefits). • Also known as: • Cafeteria Plans • Premium Only Plans (POP)
Tax Treatment of Employer-Sponsored Health Coverage Employer Sponsored Health Insurance Premium($8,045) Employer paid portion ($6,185) Employee paid portion ($1,860) May Not Be Taxable Compensation to Employee(I.R.S Code Section 125) Not Taxable Compensation to Employee (I.R.S Code Section 105,106)
Who is Eligible? • Any employer may sponsor a Section 125 Plan. • Only employees may participate in a Section 125 Plan. • Special Case: Partners, self-employed people, and people who are more than 2% shareholders in an “S” corporation are not employees and may not participate in a Section 125 Plan (but they may sponsor such plans).
The Potential Savings Depends on One’s Implicit Marginal Income Tax Rate For Lower Income Families: • Overall Marginal Tax Rates can exceed 50% at incomes below 300% FPL. • Marginal Tax Rates vary tremendously by income and family type. • Marginal Tax Rates can be negative for families with children at incomes below 125% FPL.
Federal Tax Bracket Rates Illustration for a single parent with one child:
Federal Tax Bracket Rates vs. Implicit Marginal Income Tax Rates Illustration for a single parent with one child
Tax Code Features Designed to Assist Lower Income Taxpayers … • Earned Income Tax Credit – slides with income and fully refundable • Child Tax Credit – partially refundable • Dependent Care Tax Credit – not refundable but credit percentage higher at lower incomes … cause implicit marginal income tax rates to diverge from federal income tax bracket rates
The Value of the EITC by Family Type (2005) --- Married filers are allowed higher maximum earnings than unmarried filers.
Potential Marginal Tax Rates Facing a Single Parent with Two Children*(Negative rates not displayed) * Assumes the state levies an income tax and has a state EITC (most advantageous scenario)
Warning: May want to locate binoculars.
Overall Marginal Income Tax Rates Vary by Family Composition* Shaded areas indicate overall marginal tax rates in excess of 40 percent. * Assumes the state levies an income tax and has a state EITC (most advantageous scenario)
Employers Also Benefit from Section 125 Plans • When payroll is lower by the amount of the employee share of health premiums, the employer pays less in FICA taxes.
How Can Section 125 Plans Be Used To Expand Health Coverage? • Section 125 “awareness” campaign • Link Section 125 plan use to coverage expansions targeting small employers (Pac Advantage in CA) • Require employers to offer such plans (Massachusetts; Rhode Island)
What Are States Doing Now? • MA requiresall employers with 10+ workers for pre-tax purchase of health insurance (part of a comprehensive package of health reforms). • RI enacted a "cafeteria plan" requirement for all employers with 25+ workers for pre-tax purchase of health insurance starting 2009. No state or employer payment required.
To Realize a Benefit From Section 125, the Following Must Be True • Connection to an Employer • Currently unable to purchase health insurance on a pre-tax basis • Face a non-zero premium contribution • Face a Federal or State Tax liability that could be decreased (or a refund that could be increased) • Tax Savings are non-trivial • Special Case: those eligible for an EITC refund must be able to “front” the premium amounts until taxes are filed.
Prevalence of Section-125 Plans Among Small Employers Source: TN MEPS-IC Data for 2005; National MEPS-IC Data for 2004
Promoting the Use of Section 125 Plans:Little Downside … • No new legislation is required • Requires little action on the part of employees to realize the savings • Strengthens employer-based coverage • Employee participation is always voluntary • Little or no cost to employers; may be offset by FICA savings • State may incur a tax expenditure but likely to receive a net transfer from Feds
Promoting the Use of Section 125 Plans:… But Impact May Be Small • By itself, such a policy will have only a small impact on new coverage for workers and their families: • Workers with the highest marginal tax rates are a small portion of uninsured workers • No benefit for the 20 percent of the uninsured with no connection to the workforce. • May help the currently insured maintain their employer coverage
Contact Information Lynn Quincy Mathematica Policy Research, Inc. Lquincy@mathematica-mpr.com 202-264-3449