Readers interested in Louisiana
politics got another reminder recently of the maddening inconsistency of state
Treasurer John
Kennedy’s thinking, and why, should he decide to pursue the matter, any
attempt he makes to be elected governor in 2015 should be greeted with a
healthy dose of skepticism.
Sometimes on issues he hits the
nail square on the head, as he did recently concerning a hastily-considered law
that had the effect of expanding substantially state retirement benefits for
two individuals. He correctly understood that the law
passed unconstitutionally and that legal action should be taken to have the
courts invalidate it. Further, he continually agitated for that until, in
effect, that
was the outcome.
But on other issues at times he
goes into full demagoguery mode that shreds facts bound by illogical inferences.
He displayed that recently in an opinion
piece concerning the changes
coming in the state’s employee and retiree (and for some school employees)
health benefits. Generally, while some will see these lowered, many clients
will see higher insurance costs when taking all of premiums, co-payments, and
deductibles into account as a result of those changes.
Over time a couple of years ago,
rates were decreased 9 percent with essentially no changes in the rest of the
benefits packages. At the same time, the reserves for health benefits were more
than two times the recommended actuarial amount according to industry
norms. By decreasing rates, saving some recipients several hundred dollars a
year, this also served to reduce the taxpayers’ shares paid into this – generally,
the state ponies up three dollars for every one the client has taken pre-tax
from salaries or pensions. All told, this left more money in the hands of
people who had earned it, both for clients and taxpayers, while putting to use
excess funds that had been taken from these groups to inflate an
unnecessarily-large reserve.
However, the Gov. Bobby
Jindal Administration says it miscalculated the cost side of the equation,
and in combination with the reduced revenue side, the reserves began draining
much faster than anticipated. The solution provided will stabilize reserves at
an appropriate level, but with the consequences of higher overall costs for
many – even as the Office of Group Benefits plans in question provide typically
much better coverage for lower prices than can be obtained by those who work in
the private sector who pay the taxes to support these generous programs.
This discomfited Kennedy, who in
his opinion piece likened the outcome to a “detrimental tax increase,”
apparently on clients because of “higher deductibles and fewer benefits.” He
claimed the state “helped itself to the reserves,” and that because “state
workers helped build up the fund balance” therefore to spend the reserve meant “it
is being stolen from them.” He argued that by not opting for a premium increase
to “replenish the balance” the state “is socking this solely to families.”
Characterizing these remarks as
distortions of or ignorant of the facts would be charitable. More bluntly, they
are lies. Let’s show why.
No taxes were increased in the
new plan structures. As noted, no premium increases are occurring with them
(the next effect of the last three rate changes since 2011 has been a decrease
of four percent). Unfortunately, Kennedy has fallen prey to the ignorant
misunderstanding of what a tax is (rather unfortunately as he is the state
treasurer) that many politicians use to try to make a policy action look less
desirable (such as when the claim an increase in tuition is a “tax increase’).
A tax is something levied by
government on an activity or holding of an asset that triggers an involuntary
payment from one to whom the tax is subject, which does not directly relate to
a specific service tied with that activity or asset being performed by
government in a discrete manner as compensation, this latter being a
fee-for-service. In this case of benefits, co-payments and deductibles are
relevant in direct proportion to the amount of service used. Further, having
health insurance through the state is an entire voluntary transaction; a number
of state employees refuse it and there’s nothing coercive about having to have it.
Also voluntary is the amount of health care people are willing to consume; if,
for example, co-payments go up, clients with non-essential needs can choose not
to consume those services to avoid the higher payments.
All that’s happening here is, for
many (but for some exactly the opposite), total fees for a service provided by the
state which is completely voluntary for employees are rising. Only a deliberate
distortion for political purposes could claim otherwise. It’s not a tax by any
generally accepted definition in the world of government finance.
In fact, the only thing taxation
has to do with the entire question is, interestingly, something Kennedy avoided
mentioning. That is, if his suggestion of a premium increase as preferable to changing
plan parameters was implemented (which the Administration claims would involve pretty
steep hikes), it very well could trigger a tax increase for Louisiana as a
whole. He neglects to mention that, because of the taxpayer subsidization
aspect, any premium increase takes more from taxpayers, meaning that services
must be cut elsewhere and/or taxes on them increased. While Kennedy asserts in
the piece that “I'll put my small government credentials up against anyone’s,”
he’s making it easier to dismiss those credentials by deciding to put the
interests of OGB clients ahead of those of taxpayers – especially if growing
government through taxation is the end result of his recommendation.
This fact of taxpayer support
also illuminates how Kennedy comes up short of the truth in regarding the role
of the reserve. Oddly, he seems unable to understand that draining a super-high
reserve level is not the issue; even if premiums had not been reduced, that
only would have delayed the draining. The real issue is that health care costs
were misjudged and that only plan changes (perhaps in combination with premium
increase) could respond in a way to ameliorate cost overruns that in part the
clients, but mostly taxpayers, otherwise paid in premiums.
So maybe state (and some school
board) workers (and retirees) did build up the fund balance – but taxpayers on
average built them up three times faster. And the state did not go in and take
them to spend on other non-related items, as Kennedy implies – in reality, all
that came out of the reserves went to health care spending on clients and their
families. Nothing was “stolen” from them or taxpayers – every cent was used for
the purpose intended.
And, again, Kennedy forgets about
the interests of taxpayers and doesn’t seem to understand what’s going on here
when remarking about the fund balance. The plan changes aren’t there to “replenish”
it, but to prevent it from its balance falling faster than is desirable. And
the alternative to “socking this solely to families [of clients]” is to sock it
solely to the families of the state’s citizenry (who already caught a break,
not mentioned by him, when an outside administrator took over running the
benefits program, saving
the state an estimated $10 million annually.)
Which is an interesting policy
debate, but one Kennedy doesn’t seem interested in having as it appears he’s
chosen to put more of the burden on the citizenry than the clients – even though
Louisiana state employees have, in part because of the high-benefit,
low-pay health benefits they enjoy, a gravy train of total compensation at
taxpayer expense that significantly beats what people in the private sector
doing similar tasks earn. If the end result of this policy serves to make state
employees, retirees, and school board employees and retirees pay a fairer share
of the costs they incur, why is that so controversial?
In fact, I’ll go farther than
what Kennedy suggested in that the Jindal Administration made a political
calculation to cut premiums in order to lower taxpayer payments, freeing that
money for use elsewhere in the budget (mysteriously, Kennedy neglected to
mention that this not only enabled provision of more state services, but also saved
the typical benefits clients to keep hundreds of dollars more a year of what
they earned by salary or pension). It may well have for balancing budgets – and
for building goodwill among clients. But the conspiratorial-minded also may
consider the cuts were a prelude to getting the reserves into a more legitimate
posture and to find a way to reduce the overall value of the benefits, in
effect making clients more and taxpayers less responsible for their own health
care from a situation that already heavily subsidized and favored the clients.
It may have been another tactic of the Administration to achieve its
long-standing goal of right-sizing Louisiana government, if not ever publicly
admitted.
Kennedy concludes by arguing for
a change in how benefits decisions are made, from gubernatorial control to
placing it in the hands of a collective, the Public Retirement Systems’
Actuarial Committee (which he terms the “Public Employees Retirement
Systems' Actuary Committee;” being that he actually is a member of it and it is
part of his department, after 15 years as treasurer one would have hoped that he
could identify that correctly). But after all his time in office as a single
executive with people under his command, he should know better, for two
reasons.
At a more general level, proper
administration should vest personnel matters under unified leadership. Too many
cooks spoil the broth, and if benefits policy is to be used as a tool of
hiring, retention, and motivation of workers, it needs to be under control of
the manager ultimately responsible for the vast majority of state employees
administratively, either directly or through his appointees, the governor.
Since retirees are just that, a case could be made for separating them out, but
then this dual system would create more bureaucracy and confusion. Putting a
collective in charge further exacerbates the difficulties in achieving unity in
command.
And, more specifically, the PRSAC
is the wrong group to do it. Its responsibilities presently lie entirely with
state and local government retirement payments and have nothing to do with
benefits. If one went this route, surely another body, existing or created for this
purpose, could prove to have more expertise.
It’s great when the “good”
Kennedy shows up, attending to the exposition of genuine wastefulness, if not
downright silliness, in state government and how to repair that. But when the “bad”
Kennedy emerges, in full demagoguery mode spouting off intellectual mishmash
designed to rile rather than to inform about an issue, one again must wonder whether
the primary purposes of such broadsides are to lead the state to better policy,
or whether they are for political consumption in the service of political
ambition.
1 comment:
Rest assured, the more you keep bashing Kennedy, the more I like him.
I suspect many feel that way.
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