

Working Families' Health Insurance Coverage, 1997-2001
Tracking Report No. 4
August 2002
Bradley C. Strunk, James D. Reschovsky
espite a booming U.S. economy, falling unemployment and
moderate health insurance premium growth, the percentage of
working Americans and their families with employer-sponsored
health insurance failed to increase substantially between 1997
and 2001, according to findings from the Center for Studying
Health System Change (HSC) Community Tracking Study
Household Survey. There were, however, dramatic changes in
the insurance status of people who lacked access to or did not
take up employer coverage: fewer uninsured, more public
program enrollment and a decline in coverage by individual
insurance and other sources. While the State Childrens Health
Insurance Program (SCHIP) clearly reduced uninsurance
among low-income children, evidence also suggests a fair
amount of substitution of public insurance for private coverage.
Running in Place
he combination of strong economic growth, falling
unemployment and a tight job market suggests that
the late 1990s should have cultivated a climate conducive
to helping more working families obtain employer-sponsored
insurance. Annual increases in insurance
premiums were low during most of this period, although
they rose to double digits by 2001.1
This positive environment suggests more employers should have provided
health benefits to attract and retain workers.
Yet the proportion of people in working families
with employer-sponsored insurance held steady
between 1997 and 2001.2
Of the 189 million nonelderly
people in working families in 2001, 77.5 percent, or
146 million, had employer coverage, a proportion
that remained statistically unchanged between 1997
and 20013
(see Table 1). And about 12 percent of
Americans in working families, or about 22 million
people, were uninsured in 2001, a modest decline
from 1997. Growing enrollment in public insurance
programs such as SCHIP drove the slight decline in
the uninsurance rate among Americans in working
families. There are signs, however, that the gain in public
insurance was not drawn exclusively from the ranks
of the uninsured but also came from those with private
group and individual insurance.
TABLE 1: Health Insurance Status of America’s Working Families |
|
People in Working
Families |
|
1997 |
1999 |
2001 |
Change
1997-2001 |
Insurance Status |
Employer-Sponsored Insurance1 |
76.8% |
76.6% |
77.5% |
+0.7% |
Access Rate2 |
82.7 |
82.6 |
84.0* |
+1.3 # |
Take-Up Rate |
90.1 |
90.1 |
90.0 |
-0.1 |
Individual Insurance |
4.5 |
4.1 |
3.7 |
-0.8 # |
Public Insurance |
5.8 |
6.4* |
7.2 |
+1.4 # |
Uninsured |
13.0 |
12.8 |
11.6* |
-1.4 # |
Total # of People (in millions) |
181.7 |
188.5 |
189.0 |
|
1 In addition to traditional employer coverage,
this includes military insurance, such as CHAMPUS, as well as coverage from
a previous employer, such as COBRA or retiree coverage. 2 The product
of the access and take-up rates does not exactly match the percent of
people with employer-sponsored insurance because the latter includes those
with employer-sponsored insurance from a previous employer.
* Change from previous period is statistically significant at p<.05.
# Change from 1997 to 2001 is statistically significant at p<.05.
Source: HSC Community Tracking Study Household Survey |
Employer Coverage Decline Levels Off
ather than expanding employer coverage, the economic
booms legacy could well turn out to be a short-lived
interruption of the long and steady decline in the
proportion of Americans with employer-sponsored
insurance. The percent of nonelderly Americans covered
by employers gradually declined, and the number
of uninsured persons rose, for most of the period from
the mid-1980s to the mid-1990s.4
With the U.S. economy now struggling to recover
from an economic slowdown, unemployment rising
and health insurance premiums growing rapidly, the
outlook for employer coverage expansion is tenuous at best.
Those without employer coverage also may find it more
difficult to gain access to public coverage as tight budgets
lead state and federal governments to constrain eligibility.
Working Families Without Employer Coverage
o gain employer coverage, working families must first
have access to it by having a current employer that offers health insurance
and then meeting eligibility requirements, such as working a minimum number
of hours. In 2001, 84 percent of Americans in working families had access to
employer coverage. This was only slightly higher—1.3 percentage points—than
in 1997. People in working families with access to employer coverage also must
choose whether or not to take up a current employers offer. The take-up rate
for people in eligible working families held steady between 1997 and 2001, at
about 90 percent.
The concepts of access and take up help to explain why some people in working
families do not obtain employer coverage. While about three-quarters of the
189 million people in working families in 2001 had access to and took up employer
coverage from a current employer, another 8 percent, or 16 million people in
working families, had access to but did not take up employer coverage. A third
group—30 million people in working families, or 16 percent—simply
does not have access to employer coverage (see Figure 1).
The 46 million people in working families who either
lack access to or do not take up employer coverage are the
focus of a great deal of policy debate. They tend to have
low incomes—below 200 percent of poverty, or about
$35,000 a year for a family of four in 2001—and are
more likely to describe themselves as being in fair or poor
health. They also are more likely to work for—or have a
family member who works for—a small employer (with
fewer than 100 employees). In lieu of employer coverage,
these people have three main alternatives: They can buy
individual insurance; some can enroll in public programs
like Medicaid or SCHIP; or they can go without coverage.
Insurance coverage among people in working families
who lack access to or do not take up employer coverage
changed between 1997 and 2001, primarily as a result of
SCHIP. Among the 30 million people in working families
who lacked access to employer coverage in 2001, 49 percent
were uninsured, 21 percent enrolled in public programs,
19 percent bought individual coverage and 11
percent obtained other private insurance5 (see Figure 2).
Between 1997 and 2001, the number of uninsured, individually
insured and those with other coverage shrank
slightly, but the changes in each were not statistically significant.
In that same period, enrollment in public programs
for this group grew from 17 percent to 21 percent.
Among the 16 million people who declined employer
coverage in 2001, 45 percent were uninsured, 47 percent
were enrolled in public programs and 8 percent bought
individual policies. There was a striking change in the
insurance status of these Americans between 1997 and
2001. The proportion enrolled in public programs
jumped 13 percentage points, from 34 percent in 1997
to 47 percent in 2001, with most of the change occurring
between 1999 and 2001. At the same time, the percentage
of people who declined employer coverage and were
uninsured fell by 7 percentage points, from 52 percent to
45 percent, again mostly during 1999-2001. The proportion
purchasing individual insurance fell 5 percentage
points, from 13 percent to 8 percent.
FIGURE 1: Americas Working Families Access to and Take Up
of Employer-Sponsored Insurance (ESI), 2001
FIGURE 2: Insurance Status of Nonelderly People in Working
Families Without Access to or Who Decline ESI
1 Most likely retiree coverage from a previous employer or group coverage via COBRA.
* Change from previous period is statistically significant at p<.05.
# Change from 1997 to 2001 is statistically significant at p<.05.
Source: HSC Community Tracking Study Household Survey
Covering Kids: A Success Story
n an otherwise static period, there was a dramatic
change in coverage of children from low-income
working families. The proportion of uninsured children
fell 4.9 percentage points, from 20.4 percent in 1997 to
15.5 percent in 2001. Enrollment of children in public
programs rose 10.3 percentage points, from 21 percent
in 1997 to 31.3 percent in 2001. And the proportion of
children with employer coverage dropped 4.4 percentage
points, from 55.4 percent to 51 percent (see Table 2).
SCHIP, enacted in 1997, targets low-income, uninsured children. Concerned that SCHIP might simply lead
to substitution of public coverage for existing private coverage,
Congress required states to put safeguards in place.
These crowd-out protections vary by state, but they most
commonly require children with employer-sponsored
coverage to be uninsured for a certain period (e.g., six
months) before becoming eligible for SCHIP.
Evidence suggests, however, that the growth in
childrens public coverage was not solely from the ranks
of the uninsured, but that some substitution of public
for private coverage occurred. While the percentage of
children in low-income working families with access to
employer-sponsored coverage remained unchanged at
about 70 percent between 1997 and 2001, the percentage
of children whose families took up employer coverage
fell from 51.8 percent in 1997 to 48 percent in 2001
(see Table 3).
The number of children in low-income working
families enrolled in public programs grew by about 2
million between 1997 and 2001, with a third to a half
of the increase coming from those who could have had
employer coverage.6
The fact that these trends were not
seen among parents of low-income children suggests
SCHIP was the major factor.
Some degree of substitution of SCHIP coverage for
employer coverage is inevitable and not necessarily bad.
Private insurance premiums pose a substantial financial
burden on most low-income working families, and substituting
public coverage reduces this burden.
TABLE 2: Health Insurance Status of Children (Ages 0-18) in Low-Income1
Working Families |
|
Children in
Low-Income Working Families |
|
1997 |
1999 |
2001 |
Change
1997-2001 |
Insurance Status |
Employer-Sponsored Insurance2 |
55.4% |
48.3%* |
51.0% |
-4.4% # |
Individual Insurance |
3.3 |
2.8 |
2.2 |
-1.1 |
Public Insurance |
21.0 |
27.9* |
31.3 |
+10.3 # |
Uninsured |
20.4 |
21.0 |
15.5* |
-4.9 # |
Total # of Children (in millions) |
21.4 |
22.1 |
19.1 |
|
1 Family income is less than 200 percent
of poverty.
2 Includes coverage from a parents current employer, military insurance,
such as CHAMPUS, and coverage from a parents previous employer, such as
COBRA. * Change from previous period is statistically significant at p<.05.
# Change from 1997 to 2001 is statistically significant at p<.05.
Source: HSC Community Tracking Study Household Survey |
TABLE 3: Access, Take-Up and Coverage Trends Among Children (Ages 0-18) in Low-Income1
Working Families |
|
Children in
Low-Income Working Families |
|
1997 |
1999 |
2001 |
Change
1997-2001 |
Children with Access to ESI |
69.7% |
65.0%* |
69.7%* |
0.0% |
Take Up |
51.8 |
45.0* |
48.0 |
-3.8 |
No Take Up |
17.9 |
20.1 |
21.7 |
+3.8 # |
Individual Insurance |
0.9 |
0.8 |
0.5 |
-0.4 # |
Public Insurance |
8.7 |
11.5* |
15.3* |
+6.6 # |
Uninsured |
8.3 |
7.7 |
6.0* |
-2.3 # |
Children Lacking Access to ESI |
30.3 |
35.0* |
30.3* |
0.0 |
Individual Insurance |
2.3 |
2.0 |
1.7 |
-0.6 |
Other Private |
3.6 |
3.4 |
3.0 |
-0.6 |
Public Insurance |
12.3 |
16.4* |
16.1 |
+3.8 # |
Uninsured |
12.2 |
13.2 |
9.5* |
-2.7 # |
1 Family income is less than 200 percent
of poverty.
* Change from previous period is statistically significant at p<.05.
# Change from 1997 to 2001 is statistically significant at p<.05.
Source: HSC Community Tracking Study Household Survey |
Running on Empty?
he failure of the economic boom to expand employer-based
coverage for working families significantly is ominous.
The softening of the U.S. economy and the return
to double-digit health insurance premium increases are
likely to weaken employers ability to offer health insurance
and lead them to shift a greater share of the cost to
employees. Combined with slower wage growth, this will
reduce workers willingness to take up coverage offers.
The return of federal and state budget deficits may
presage cuts in such public programs as SCHIP and
Medicaid.
Ultimately, the legacy of the 1990s boom may be a
short-term interruption in greater numbers of uninsured
Americans and fewer employers offering coverage. This
suggests that relying on economic growth alone to reduce
the number of uninsured is unlikely to be effective in
achieving substantial expansion of employer coverage.
Short of an employer mandate to offer health benefits or
universal public coverage, efforts to increase insurance
coverage among low-income working individuals and
families will require substantial government funding,
whether the approach chosen involves new or expanded
public insurance programs or subsidies to purchase
private insurance.
Data Source
his Tracking Report presents findings from the HSC Community
Tracking Study Household Survey, a nationally representative telephone survey
of the civilian, noninstitutionalized population conducted in 1996-97, 1998-99
and 2000-01. For discussion and presentation, we refer to a single calendar
year of the survey (1997, 1999 and 2001). Data were supplemented by in-person
interviews of households without telephones to ensure proper representation.
Each round of the survey contains information on about 60,000 people, and response
rates ranged from 60 percent to 65 percent.
The estimates in this report are representative
of nonelderly people in working families.
A working family is defined as one in which
the total number of hours worked by all adult
members of the family is 20 or more per week.
We exclude families in which all adult members
are self-employed without paid employees as well
as people who obtain health insurance from someone outside the family.
If any member of the family has access to employer coverage, then
all members are considered to have access. The take-up rate is defined
at the person level, since it is possible for some family members to be
covered by an employer, while others are uninsured or have other coverage.
Insurance status reflects coverage on the day of the interview.
Notes
1. |
Strunk, Bradley C., Paul B. Ginsburg and Jon R. Gabel, “Tracking
Health Care Costs,” Health Affairs, Web Exclusive (Sept.
26, 2001). |
2. |
The absolute number of people in working families with
employer coverage grew over the period, but this is attributable
to population growth. Economic growth did not alter the
proportion of the nonelderly population in working families.
|
3. |
Previous research using data from the Current Population Survey indicates
that employer coverage among the entire nonelderly U.S. population increased
by 3 percentage points between 1994 and 2000 (see Holahan, John, and Mary
Beth Pohl, "Changes in Insurance Coverage, 1994-2000 and Beyond," Health
Affairs,Web Exclusive [April 3, 2002]). This report does not show this
increase because it focuses only on people in working families—those
in which at least one adult worked at least 20 hours a week for an employer,
public or private—and because of differences in how types of dual
coverage were categorized. |
4. |
Fronstin, Paul, Sources of Health Insurance and Characteristics of the
Uninsured: Analysis of the March 2001 Current Population Survey, EBRI
Issue Brief No. 240, Employee Benefits Research Institute, Washington, D.C.
(December 2001). |
5. |
This includes retiree coverage or group coverage via the
Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1986,
which allows certain individuals and dependents who leave
employment to continue their coverage by paying the full
premium plus a 2 percent administrative fee.
|
6. |
A more detailed multivariate analysis that controls for other
factors, such as the increase in premium costs, would be
required to ascertain accurately the proportion of substitution
attributable to SCHIP.
|
TRACKING REPORTS are published by the Center for Studying Health System Change.
President: Paul B. Ginsburg
Director of Public Affairs: Richard Sorian
Editor: The Stein Group
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|