
LTC
Bullet: The WA Cares Fund Gets a Bad Wrap
Friday, June 18, 2021
Seattle—
LTC Comment: Is Washington State’s new
compulsory payroll-funded social insurance entitlement program a “wrap
trap”? Find out after the ***news.***
*** LATE BREAKING: Two major private
long-term care insurance carriers, Mutual of Omaha and Thrivent, have
suspended sales in Washington State effective June 17, 2021. These
measures appear to have been taken to avoid allowing the purchase of the
companies’ products to be used to dodge the State of Washington’s
WA Cares Fund mandatory payroll
deduction. To avoid that payroll tax, employees must prove they have
qualifying private LTC insurance in place by November 1, 2021. That will
now be harder to do. ***
*** LTC COMMENT: Architects of the WA Cares
Fund should go back to the drawing board before they ruin the LTC
insurance market in Washington State entirely and join the government LTC
insurance Hall of Shame along with CalPERS and the CLASS Act, not to
mention Medicaid. Let’s hope the
InLTCgentsia promoting the WA Cares Fund
as a model program for the rest of the country is paying attention. ***
LTC BULLET: THE WA CARES FUND GETS A BAD WRAP
LTC Comment: Referring to a program that now
calls itself the
WA Cares Fund I asked last October “What
happens when the
Keystone Kops design a long-term care insurance plan?”
Thanks to a
series of articles by the
Washington Policy Center’s
Elizabeth Hovde, we have some more-recent answers to that question
here,
here,
here,
here, and
here. See also “Did
you receive a ‘long-term care’ email from your employer? Here’s what it
means to opt-in or opt-out,” by Mike Lewis for Geekwire. He
adds “If you need more help or want additional details, here are some
explainers:
I conclude: Oh
what a tangled web they weave when politicians practice to conceive
careless, compulsory, complicated new programs. So I disagree with Otto
von Bismarck, who said: “Laws are like sausages, it is better not to see
them being made.” Distasteful as the process is we’d better watch it
closely or we’ll have to live with the dismal consequences indefinitely.
So watch it we will in today’s Guest Bullet
article by
LTC Associates’
Stephen D. Forman, exclusively for
LTC Bullets. We thank the author
and the company for their support of the Center for Long-Term Care Reform
and for this insightful column.
“The WA Cares Fund Gets a Bad Wrap”
by
Stephen D. Forman
From the start, WA Cares Fund advocates
promised that the public program would supercharge the development and
purchase of so-called “wraparound” products by the private market. It was
a selling point: “The private LTC insurance market is currently failing,
but a new LTC Trust
could spur [a] new LTC wrap market,
similar to what happened with Medicare and gap plans.” By design, a new
“LTC Supplement” product would have to be more affordable than today’s
comprehensive offerings, making it more attractive to Washington
consumers. Unfortunately, by barreling ahead without consulting with
insurance carriers, distributors, consumers, or the Washington Insurance
Department before making this pronouncement, proponents got out over their
skis.
The WA Cares Fund is practically unwrappable.
Not all of the issues below are equally
serious, but each should have been considered before—not after—the Fund
was drafted into law. Wrapping the WA Cares Fund well takes more than just
an “off-the-shelf” product sold with a long elimination period.
-
Portability
-
Although the wage tax is owed by
anyone who earns income “localized” in Washington, the $36,500 nominal
WA Cares Fund benefit is payable only to state residents.
(Private LTC insurance pays anywhere in the US, almost always Canada,
and usually globally.) From a wraparound standpoint, a carrier would
have to price a product with a $36,500 deductible that exists only for
care incurred in one state, but not in the other 49… or a
universal deductible of $36,500 in all states that a resident
clearly understood would be met by the WA Cares Fund at home, but
would be their responsibility for care received outside the Evergreen
State.
-
Inflation
-
We say “nominal” because the
Fund’s $36,500 benefit will change unpredictably over time. What will
it be in 15 or 30 years, when beneficiaries need care? No one can say,
which makes inflating a wrap product in synch a challenge. The Fund’s
benefit units may rise or fall each year depending on the vote of an
8-person Trust Council. Wrapping this deductible will be like riding a
bucking bronco—and for its inflation rate the State didn’t even select
the correct CPI standard required for Washington LTC Partnership
Qualification (not that they had to, but c’mon,
it was right there).
-
If pressure were to be put on
the tax rate in the future, it was suggested during a
presentation on public LTC design that the first “cut”
would be to lower the inflation rate.
-
Partnership
-
Speaking of the Partnership
Program, the WA Cares Fund may spell its end (about 6 in 10 policies
sold in Washington qualify now). By protecting assets from Medicaid
spenddown and estate recovery, Partnership Qualified policies are
ideally-suited for broad-market Washingtonians. But the WA Cares Fund
was billed first and foremost as a Medicaid replacement, with
Fund beneficiaries receiving no protection from asset spenddown and
estate recovery.
-
To be Partnership Qualified,
your policy must first meet the requirements for Tax Qualification: if
“LTC Supplements” can’t thread this needle, they’ll be less appealing
to their target market.
-
Benefit Triggers
-
Speaking of tax qualification,
the WA Cares Fund doesn’t use Tax-Qualified triggers. Instead of the
nearly 25-year old federal standard, Washington is going with its own
Medicaid standard (3
or more ADLs), and no 90-day chronic illness certification.
-
A beneficiary risks qualifying
for benefits under the Fund, but not under their private policy (or
vice-versa). Or, they may find a benefit or service covered under one
program, but not the other (as has happened with assisted living under
Medicaid). These risks exist so long as programs like the Cares Fund
can be amended twice a year through legislative action: neither the
premiums nor benefits nor eligibility triggers are predictable or
certain. Wrap that.
-
Co-Insurance
-
The analogy to Medicare
Supplements is built on the idea of co-insurance. The general
principle is that Medicare foots 80% of the cost, and an optional
private policy picks up the 20% “gap” left over. An LTC Supplement
built to cover these small “gaps” should be more affordable, right?
We’ve hit our first snag: the analogy misfires. MedSupp is for care
used soon and regularly; LTC is for care often used later and claimed
infrequently.
-
The WA Cares Fund doesn’t work
like an 80/20 co-insurance plan; instead, it’s a “first payor” plan,
and its $36,500 is a deductible. Your LTC insurance “gap” policy would
step in at the $36,501st dollar and cover everything
catastrophically to follow. How stimulated would the market have been
for Medicare Supplements if the original cost-sharing had been
reversed from 80/20 to 20/80?
-
Elimination Period
-
Advocates of the Cares Fund
emphasized that many residents lack even a modest emergency account
for healthcare expenses—the Fund has even been called a “structured
savings account” by its primary sponsor—and for this reason, benefits
must be payable from the first day. They got their wish. When
the LTC Trust Act was passed, it included “no elimination period in
either Title 50B RCW or the administrative rules,” as the Employment
Security Department put it.
-
There’s just one problem: the
0.58% payroll tax pays for only a 45-day elimination period.
-
The Fund will have to raise its
payroll tax by 0.12%, to 0.70%, to support its existing no-elimination
period structure (all else being equal).
-
This discrepancy—one of the
greatest threats to Fund solvency, greater than the private insurance
opt-out—is well-known to the Trust Commission (“the
cost of the program will go up significantly if there is a 0-day
elimination period, compared to the baseline assumption of
45 days.”)
-
When a Constitutional Amendment
is re-introduced this fall in an attempt to remedy the ($14.7 billion)
projected actuarial deficit—a number that does not include the
elimination period problem—would the public continue to support the
Fund if they learned about this omission? It’s not clear voters
support it now, having rejected
Advisory Vote 20 and
SJR 8212.
-
Demand
-
During public testimony in favor
of the WA Cares Fund, our Insurance Department declared the private
LTC market “broken.” Adding injury to insult, for decades consumers
around the country have been able to purchase short-term care coverage
(“STC”) akin to the WA Cares Fund—but ironically, our Insurance
Department frowns on it.
-
LTC insurance has been
rate-stabilized in Washington since 2009, then in 2016 the
Society of Actuaries reported on the significantly reduced risk of
rate increases on newly-issued plans. No one listening to WA Cares
Fund proponents would know this—the
rate increases in the articles they cited were on
twenty-year old policies, the conclusion of a gloomy market they
described as “imploded” as though we’d brought it on ourselves.
-
What’s “broken” might be
Medicaid, itself a driver of higher insurance rates (private payers
subsidize Medicaid’s below-cost reimbursements to providers).
-
If “affordability” were the
obstacle some say has prevented LTC insurance sales from flourishing,
then 100 carriers would be selling short-term coverage today to take
advantage of the insatiable demand. Let’s suggest “crowd-out” plays a
larger role than you’d like to admit.
Award-winning research suggests Medicaid replaces 80% of
the market for LTC insurance because consumers don’t wish to pay for
something the government gives them already (even if they’re only
aware of it unconsciously). The WA Cares Fund risks exacerbating
crowd-out, and—rather than invigorating sales—could further
desensitize the public to the risk of needing to pay for care.
-
Insurance or Not
-
The program is “damned if it is,
and damned if it isn’t,” and the Washington Insurance Department may
have painted itself into a corner. (We always found it strange how the
Cares Fund describes itself as being overseen by three state agencies,
but never mentions the fourth agency it is regulated by: the
Insurance Department.)
-
The Fund borrows from the
insurance world (“premium allowance”) when it wishes to avoid the
politically perilous term “payroll tax.” It has advertised itself to
the public as “long-term
care insurance” in nearly all of its consumer-facing
materials, though
it is not permitted to do so without following the RCWs and
WACs that adhere to the term.
-
I’d admit to compiling a list of
RCWs and
WACs the WA Cares Fund has been violating, but the fact is:
the Washington Insurance Department has been compiling this list—it’s
their job. Further, the Department has made it a point of emphasis the
past two years to crack down on any entity that acts like
insurance, no matter the label. Semantics has been no defense.
-
The Department’s advice to
consumers who need help determining if their policy qualifies as LTC
insurance is to “contact
your insurance company.” Since the WA Cares Fund—in the
text of the law—calls itself “long-term care insurance”—
which company should consumers call? Is it AM Best Rated “A+”
(Superior)?
-
Questions like these make me
wonder whether the WA Cares Fund will exist a few years from now, and
questions like that make me wonder whether insurers will feel
motivated to invest time, energy, and expense, developing, filing, and
marketing “wrap products” here after the traumatic experience we’ve
just all just shared.
When Fund proponents began their makeover of
the state’s private LTC insurance market, they included no one from the
private LTC insurance market in their discussions, and this lack of
outreach is reflected in the morass described above. Their resistance was
so entrenched, it took the State Legislature
passing a law to literally compel WA
Cares Fund commission to “work with insurers.”
The ACLI expressed concerns about the
viability of wrap products to the Trust Commission as well—perhaps their
diplomatic influence will advance the success of this market. Had the
insurance community been included earlier, we’d have been more optimistic.
One thing’s for sure: if private LTC insurance is indeed broken in
Washington State, we’ve got a good idea who broke it.
Stephen D. Forman, CLTC of
Long Term Care Associates,
Inc. is
co-author of “The
Advisor’s Guide to Long-Term Care”
(2nd Ed.), published by National Underwriter. Reach him at
steve@ltc-associates.com. |