TY - JOUR AU - Meara,Ellen AU - Rosenthal,Meredith AU - Sinaiko,Anna AU - Baicker,Katherine TI - State and Federal Approaches to Health Reform: What Works for the Working Poor? JF - National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper Series VL - No. 14125 PY - 2008 Y2 - June 2008 UR - http://www.nber.org/papers/w14125 L1 - http://www.nber.org/papers/w14125.pdf N1 - Author contact info: Ellen Meara Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice 35 Centerra Parkway Lebanon, NH 03755 Tel: 603/653-0899 E-Mail: ellen.r.meara@dartmouth.edu Meredith Rosenthal Department of Health Policy and Management Harvard School of Public Health 677 Huntington Avenue Boston, MA 02115 Tel: 617/432-3418 E-Mail: mrosenth@hsph.harvard.edu Anna Sinaiko Department of Health Policy and Management Harvard School of Public Health 677 Huntington Avenue, Rm 433 Boston, MA 02115 Tel: 617 432-6472 E-Mail: asinaiko@hsph.harvard.edu Katherine Baicker Professor of Health Economics Department of Health Policy and Management Harvard School of Public Health 677 Huntington Avenue Boston, MA 02115 E-Mail: kbaicker@hsph.harvard.edu AB - We compare and contrast the labor market and distributional impact of three common approaches to state and federal health insurance expansion: public insurance expansions, refundable tax credits for low income people, and employer and individual mandates. We draw on existing estimates from the literature and individual-level data on the non-institutionalized population aged 64 and younger from the 2005 Current Population Survey to estimate how each approach affects (1) the number of people insured; (2) private and public health spending; (3) employment and wages; and (4) the distribution of subsidies across families based on income in relation to the federal poverty level and work status of adult family members. Employer mandates expand coverage to the largest number of previously insured relative to public insurance expansions and individual tax credits, but with potentially negative labor market consequences. Medicaid expansions could achieve moderate reductions in the share of the uninsured with neutral labor market consequences, and by definition, they expand coverage to the poorest groups regardless of work status. Tax credits extend coverage to relatively few uninsured, but with neutral effects on the labor market. Both Medicaid expansions and tax credits offer moderate redistribution to previously insured individuals who are poor or near-poor. None of the three policies significantly expand insurance coverage among poor working families. Our findings suggest that no single approach helps the working poor in exactly the ways policy makers might hope. To the extent that states are motivated to help the uninsured in poor working families, health reforms must find ways to include those unlikely to take up optional policies, and states must address the challenge of the many uninsured likely to be excluded from policies based on part-time work status, firm size, or immigration status. ER -