Some fresh reporting from Michigan indicates that there
is still quite a bit of certainty ahead for a health care tax scheme with big ERISA
preemption considerations as it ropes in self-insured group health plans. (See 11/23/12 blog post for prior reporting
on this subject.)
While industry observers wait on a federal appeals court to
rule on whether the state state’s Health Insurance Claims Act (HICA) violates
federal law, there is one open question that appears to be settled, which is
that the tax will not sunset at the end of the year as originally intended.
Governor Snyder is expected to sign legislation (SB 335)
as early as this week that will extend the sunset provision for four
years. So this “temporary” tax sure has
a permanent feel to it.
A proposal to hike the one percent tax was stripped from
the legislation but that does not necessarily mean that it not going
happen. That’s because the Legislature
has finalized the state’s 2013-2014 budget assuming $400 million in revenue
coming from the HICA tax.
The problem is that number likely overestimates revenue by
at least $130 million based on the current year’s tax receipts. Legislators hope to fill this revenue gap by tweaking
the state’s no fault auto insurance system and related new vehicle fees, but if
this is not done by October, they will be forced to pass what is known as a “negative
supplemental appropriates bill” and the heat with again be on again to increase
the HICA tax.
Last year, this blog spoke to a major multi-self-insured
employer based on Michigan to gage how they have adapted to the HICA tax. The response regarding the economic affect
was largely expected – essentially that it raised the cost of doing business
but that it has not prompted them to reconsider being self-insured.
Absence intervention by a federal appeals court, it will
be interesting to see whether this ERISA preemption assault can be quarantined with
the Michigan state lines.