Introductory Info
Date introduced: 12 May 2021
House: House of Representatives
Portfolio: Health
Commencement: 1 July 2021
Purpose of
the Bill
The purpose of the Private Health Insurance Amendment
(Income Thresholds) Bill 2021 (the Bill) is to amend the Private Insurance
Act 2007 (the PHI Act) to:
- extend the pause on indexation of the income thresholds which
determine private health insurance (PHI) rebate amounts and Medicare Levy
Surcharge rates for the 2021–22 and 2022–23 financial years and
- adjust the formula for the re-commencement of annual indexation from
1 July 2023.
This implements a 2021–22 Budget measure.[1]
Background
Private health insurance
Australia’s health system is a mix of public and private
health care.
Private health insurance can help with the cost of
treatment in a private hospital or as a private patient in a public hospital.
It can give patients greater choice (for example, of doctor and timing of
treatment), as well as help with the cost of ancillary treatments not covered
by Medicare such as dental, optical and physiotherapy.
It is not mandatory to have private health insurance but
there are Commonwealth incentives for people to have it; namely, the private
health insurance rebate and the Medicare Levy Surcharge. Under Medicare, all
Australians are eligible for subsidised medical treatment and free treatment as
a public patient in a public hospital.
Hospital and general treatment (sometimes called ancillary
or extras) policies can be purchased separately or through combined policies. As
at 31 March 2021:
- 11,396,181
people, or 44.2% of the population, had hospital treatment cover
- 13,886,876
people, or 53.8% of the population, had general treatment cover.[2]
The PHI Act is the primary law setting out
requirements for private health insurance and health insurers.
Private health insurance rebate and
Medicare Levy Surcharge
The Howard Government introduced the PHI rebate and
Medicare Levy Surcharge in the late 1990s with the objective to stabilise the
level of participation in private health insurance in Australia, which had
steadily declined following the introduction of Medicare in 1984.[3]
PHI rebate
The PHI rebate was introduced in 1999 and provides a
government rebate on private health insurance premiums for hospital, general
treatment and ambulance policies. For many years, the rebate was 30% of a
person’s PHI premium, with higher rebates for those aged 65 and over introduced
from 2005.[4]
There are two ways to receive the rebate:
- as
a premium reduction through the private health insurer
- as
a tax offset when lodging an annual tax return.[5]
Most people receive the rebate as a premium reduction. This
is delivered through the Premiums reduction scheme set out in Part 2-2 of the PHI
Act, which states that the purpose is ‘to encourage people to take out, and
continue to hold, private health insurance’.[6]
In 2021–22, the Government expects to spend $6.7 billion
on the PHI rebate.[7]
Medicare Levy Surcharge
The Medicare Levy Surcharge (MLS) was introduced in 1997
and is an additional levy, on top of the Medicare Levy, imposed on taxpayers
who earn above a certain income and who do not have private hospital cover.[8]
According to taxation statistics, in 2018–19, nearly 330,000
individuals paid the MLS, with revenue totalling around $415.4 million.[9]
Introduction of income testing
The Gillard Government introduced tiered PHI
rebates and MLS rates based on income in 2012. As explained in the Bills Digest
on the relevant Bills introducing these measures:
When these measures were announced in 2009,
the Government claimed they would make PHI ‘fairer’ because those with a
greater capacity to pay would do so. As well they would make PHI more fiscally
sustainable into the future. By reducing the PHI rebate to higher income earners,
the Government expected to make substantial savings.[10]
Table 1 below shows the tiered PHI rebates and MLS rates that
applied from 1 July 2012.
Table 1: Private Health Insurance incentive
tiers with effect from 1 July 2012
|
Base Tier
|
Tier 1
|
Tier 2
|
Tier 3
|
Singles |
≤$84,000 |
$84,001–97,000 |
$97,001–130,000 |
≥$130,001 |
Families |
≤$168,000 |
$168,001–194,000 |
$194,001–260,000 |
≥$260,001 |
PHI rebate (%)
|
≤ age 65 |
30 |
20 |
10 |
0 |
Age 65–69 |
35 |
25 |
15 |
0 |
Age 70+ |
40 |
30 |
20 |
0 |
Medicare Levy Surcharge (%) |
All ages |
0.0 |
1.0 |
1.25 |
1.5 |
Source: Department of Health
(DoH), ‘Means
testing the Private Health Insurance Rebate and Medicare Levy Surcharge (Fairer
private health insurance incentive tiers’, Private health insurance circular
14/12, DoH Website, 17 March 2012, (Trove).
Section 22-45 of the PHI Act provides for annual
indexation of income thresholds, based on changes in average weekly ordinary
time earnings (AWOTE) each financial year. The AWOTE is published twice-yearly by
the Australian Bureau of Statistics.[11]
Annual indexation means that the income thresholds take into account growth in
incomes over time.
Previous indexation pauses
Following the
introduction of the income tiers, indexation occurred in accordance with the PHI
Act for the 2013–14 and
2014–15 financial years.
The Government
announced a savings measure in the 2014–15 Budget to pause the indexation of
the income thresholds for the MLS and the PHI rebate for three years from
1 July 2015; this was extended in the 2016–17 Budget for a further three
years.[12] The pause on indexation is reflected
in subsections 22‑45(3A) and (3B) of the PHI Act.
The effect of a
pause in the indexation of income thresholds is that as incomes generally rise
over time, more people cross into the next tier than would have been the case
if the thresholds were indexed. Crossing into a higher tier means a lower PHI
rebate and higher MLS liability. The longer indexation is paused, the more
significant this effect is.
Current thresholds and rates
Table 2 shows the income tiers and rates that apply as at
27 May 2021 for the PHI rebate and MLS.
Table 2: Private Health Insurance
incentive tiers as at May 2021
|
Base Tier
|
Tier 1
|
Tier 2
|
Tier 3
|
Singles |
≤$90,000 |
$90,001–105,000 |
$105,001–140,000 |
≥$140,001 |
Families |
≤$180,000 |
$180,001–210,000 |
$210,001–280,000 |
≥$280,001 |
PHI rebate (%)
|
≤ age 65 |
24.608 |
16.405 |
8.202 |
0 |
Age 65–69 |
28.710 |
20.507 |
12.303 |
0 |
Age 70+ |
32.812 |
24.608 |
16.405 |
0 |
Medicare Levy Surcharge (%) |
All ages |
0.0 |
1.0 |
1.25 |
1.5 |
Note: The PHI rebate percentages are
lower than those seen in Table 1 due to the application of a Rebate Adjustment
Factor (RAF) since 2014. [13]
The operation of the RAF is separate to the determination of the income
thresholds and is not being changed by this Bill. The RAF is calculated by the
Department of Health and takes into account the difference between the change
in the consumer price index and the industry weighted average increase in
premiums. [14] This has
resulted in a reduced rebate for consumers over time.
Source: Commonwealth Ombudsman, ‘Australian
Government Private Health Insurance Rebate’, Private Health website, n.d.
Review of policy settings
In announcing the continued pause on the indexation of
income thresholds, the Government has noted that this decision will allow time
to undertake a review into the current policy settings.
The Budget Papers describe this as ‘a review of the MLS
Policy settings’.[15]
The Department of Health’s Budget factsheet on the measure suggests it will be
broader and also include the PHI rebate, referring to ‘a study examin[ing] the
effectiveness of the current regulatory settings’ and stating that ‘A range of
studies being funded through this Budget will provide advice and insights which
can be used to better formulate policy surrounding MLS settings [and] the PHI
Rebate … in the future’.[16]
The Explanatory Memorandum states the pause ‘will provide an opportunity to
undertake a detailed study of settings of the PHI rebate and the MLS’.[17]
To date, no further detail on the scope, timing and
objectives of the review, or who will be conducting the review, has been
published.
There have been growing calls for a review or changes to
PHI rebate and the MLS. The Australian Medical Association has called for
Government to reconsider MLS levels and thresholds, and for additional work to
establish the impacts on PHI participation if the rebate were to be increased.[18]
Private health insurer industry body, Private
Healthcare Australia, called for an increase in the MLS and gradual restoration
of the PHI rebate to 30 per cent in its 2020–21 pre-Budget submission.[19]
A 2019 Grattan Institute report called for an overhaul of current PHI
incentives, including gradually phasing out the MLS, focusing the PHI rebate on
older Australians and allowing insurers to charge younger people less than
older people for the same level of coverage.[20]
There are sound reasons for a review of current settings. Because
the income thresholds and rate of the MLS have been unchanged for some time,
while premiums have continued to increase, the effectiveness of the MLS as an
incentive to take-up private health insurance has been diminishing. For those
just over the liability threshold (for example, singles earning just over
$90,000 per year), the cost of the MLS (around $900 per year) is generally less
than the cost of hospital policies. A search on the government comparison
website, privatehealth.gov.au, for the most basic hospital policy (with very
limited benefits) for a single 35 year old earning $95,000 identified 12
available policies ranging from $948 to $1,380 per year (after a PHI rebate of
16.4 per cent).[21]
Alongside this, the pause, for several years, to the indexation
of income thresholds means the level at which people become liable for the MLS is
trending towards average incomes rather than remaining focused on higher income
earners as was the case when the measure was introduced.
Concerns about the affordability of PHI, particularly
among younger people who are typically healthier and less likely to claim
benefits, drive arguments to increase the PHI rebate. Given this would come at
significant cost to the Commonwealth, the impacts and benefits of such a change
need to be well understood.
Committee
consideration
Senate Selection of Bills Committee
At its meeting of 13 May 2021, the Senate Selection of
Bills Committee deferred consideration of the Bill until its next meeting.[22]
Senate Standing Committee for the
Scrutiny of Bills
The Scrutiny of Bills Committee had no comment on the Bill.[23]
Policy
position of non-government parties/independents
In the second reading debate, the Shadow Minister for
Health, the Hon Mark Butler MP, indicated that the opposition will be
supporting the passage of this Bill. However, he noted that the continued pause
on thresholds has had a ‘substantial financial impact on middle-income
households’.[24]
The House of Representatives passed the Bill on 1 June
2021.[25]
The position of other parties and independents is not
known at this stage.
Position of
major interest groups
There has been limited stakeholder
reaction regarding the decision to extend the pause on indexation.
Private health insurer industry body,
Private Healthcare Australia, did not comment specifically on the decision to
extend the pause in its response to the 2021–22 Budget package, instead focusing
on the associated review and potential future changes, noting:
The government’s
decision to review the current policy setting for the Medicare Levy surcharge
[and] the PHI Rebate … signals further commitment to improving the
affordability of private health care.[26]
Financial
implications
The Explanatory Memorandum states that ‘the
Government is investing $30.6 million over four years to continue to make
private health insurance simpler and more affordable for Australians’.[27] This figure appears to
relate to separate expenditure measures under the 2021–22 Budget measure Private
Health Insurance — building the sustainability of the sector and improving
affordability for patients related to private health insurance.[28]
The Budget papers state that not resuming
indexation for a further two years ‘will achieve efficiencies of $303.9 million
over four years from 1 July 2021’.[29]
The Budget Papers also show receipts to the Australian Taxation Office of $41
million over three years from 2022–23 from this measure.[30] This appears to relate to increased
revenue as more people become liable to pay the MLS (or liable to pay a higher
rate) than would be the case if indexation recommenced from 1 July 2021.
This may be offset to some degree by PHI rebate payments for people who choose
to take up private health insurance rather than pay the MLS.
Statement of Compatibility with Human Rights
As required under Part 3 of the Human Rights
(Parliamentary Scrutiny) Act 2011 (Cth), the Government has assessed
the Bill’s compatibility with the human rights and freedoms recognised or
declared in the international instruments listed in section 3 of that Act. The
Government considers that the Bill is compatible because it promotes the right
to health.[31]
In its assessment the Government noted that the Bill is ‘designed to support
the sustainability of private health insurance and accordingly is intended to
promote individual’s access to health services’.[32]
Parliamentary Joint Committee on
Human Rights
At the time of writing, the Committee had not commented on
the Bill.[33]
Key issues
and provisions
Maintaining current thresholds will
increase costs for some people
This Bill will have no impact for most people with private
health insurance, but will adversely affect those whose incomes, over the next
two financial years, rise across the thresholds that would otherwise have
increased according to the indexation formula. Specifically:
- those
whose incomes rise to tier 1 ($90,001 for singles; $180,001 for families) will
become liable for the MLS (at a rate of 1 per cent) and no longer receive the
full PHI rebate
- those
whose incomes rise to tier 2 ($105,001 for singles; $210,001 for families) will
be liable for an increased MLS of 1.5 per cent and receive the lowest PHI rebate
- those
whose incomes rise to tier 3 ($140,001 for singles; $280,001 for families) will
be liable for an increased MLS of 2 per cent and no longer receive the PHI
rebate.
While the previous pauses on indexation of income
thresholds were described as savings measures,[34]
this time the measure is framed as ‘maintaining current policy settings’ and intended
to ‘ensure continuity of current arrangements’ while a review is undertaken.[35]
It is not apparent why retaining the current settings is necessary for the
review. While not described as a savings measure, the measure will restrain
expenditure growth, saving the Government $303.9 million over the next four
years.
Former Department of Health senior public
servant Charles Maskell-Knight criticised the Budget documentation on the measure as ‘deceptive, if not
secretive, about the decision’, stating:
… it is disingenuous for the Budget Paper to
ascribe the $303.9 million in savings to “efficiencies”. It is simply shifting
$303.9 million of the cost of private health insurance from the Government to
policy holders.[36]
Overview of key provisions
Freezing income
thresholds for two more years
Item 1
repeals and replaces section 22-35 of the PHI Act. Existing section
22-35 sets out the tier 1, tier 2 and tier 3 income thresholds for singles that
were in place when thresholds were first introduced, and states the amount is
indexed annually in accordance with section 22-45. Proposed section 22-35 specifies
the income thresholds for each tier for singles for 2021–22 and 2022–23 (which
reflect the thresholds that have been in place since the 2014–15 financial year)
and states the amount is indexed for later financial years under section 22‑45.
This amendment will also apply to family income thresholds as defined in
section 22-40, which provides that the family thresholds are double the
equivalent singles thresholds (with a formula for increasing the threshold if a
person has two or more dependents who are children).
The effect of these changes is to
maintain the current income thresholds for a further two financial years,
before indexation in accordance with section 22-45 commences.
Item 2 is
consequential to Item 1, and updates the example given in subsection 22-40(4)
for calculating the threshold for a person with three dependents who are
children.
Adjusting the
formula for annual indexation
Current situation
Section 22-45 of the PHI Act sets out the process
for calculating the annual indexation of income thresholds.
Currently, indexation occurs by multiplying the various
thresholds set out at section 22-35 (which reflect the amounts for the 2008–09
financial year for tier 1, and for the 2010–11 financial year for tiers 2 and 3)
by the indexation factor.[37]
There are currently separate provisions setting out the indexation factor for
singles tier 1 thresholds and singles tier 2 and 3 thresholds.
The indexation factor for the singles tier 1 threshold is
calculated by dividing the estimated full-time adult average
weekly ordinary time earnings (AWOTE) for the middle month of the quarter
ending on 31 December for the current year by the AWOTE for the middle month of
the quarter ending on 31 December 2007.[38]
The indexation factor for the singles tier 2 and 3
thresholds are calculated by dividing the AWOTE for the middle
month of the quarter ending on 31 December for the current year by the AWOTE
for the middle month of the quarter ending on 31 December 2009.[39] The use of a different base
amount with respect to tier 1 and tiers 2 and 3 reflects that the tiers as set
in section 22-35 related to different financial years, and means that they are
indexed at a different rate.
Subsections 22-45(3), (3A), (3B) set out
when indexation does not occur. Subsection 22-45(3) states the amount is not to
be indexed if its indexation factor (as specified in subsection 22-45(4) is 1
or less. Subsections 22-45(3A) and (3B) are the provisions by which income
thresholds have remained at 2014–15 levels. Subsection 22-45(3A) states the
amount is not to be indexed for the 2015–16, 2016–17, 2017–18, 2018–19, 2019–20
or 2020–21 financial years and subsection 22-45(3B) provides that if an amount
is not indexed because of subsection 22-45(3A), the amount for the financial
year is the amount for the most recent financial year for which the amount was
indexed. This meant that the tier 1, tier 2 and tier 3 thresholds for the 2014–15
financial year, which was the last year that the thresholds were indexed, have
been the threshold amounts for the years 2015–16, 2016–17, 2018–19, 2019–20 and
2020–21.
Proposed amendments
Items 3-9
repeal and replace elements of section 22-45 to recommence indexation from the
2023–24 financial year.
Item 3
repeals subsection 22-45(1) and substitutes a provision stating that an amount
mentioned in section 22-35 is indexed for the 2023–24 financial year, and later
financial years, in accordance with this section. This amendment clarifies that
references to ‘amount’ in section 22-45 refers to an amount specified in
section 22-35 (currently section 22-45 refers to the ‘amount for the 2008–2009
financial year’) and reflects that indexation of the thresholds will now occur
from 2023–24 onwards.
Subsection 22-45(2) outlines how amounts
are to be indexed. Specifically, the amount is to be multiplied by its
indexation factor (set out in subsections 22-45(4) and (5)) and then rounded
down to the nearest multiple of $1,000. Item 4 repeals and replaces paragraph
22-45(2)(a) to clarify that ‘amount’ refers to an amount specified in section
22-35 (which sets out the 2021–22 and 2022–23 thresholds) and removes the
reference to subsection 22-45(5) to reflect that singles tiers 1-3 thresholds will
now be indexed at the same base rate.
Item 6
repeals subsections 22-45(3), (3A) and (3B), and replaces these with new
provisions that state that the amount is not to be indexed when the calculated
indexed amount is less than the original threshold amount or the indexed amount
for the previous financial year. This prevents income thresholds from being
lower than the previous financial year.
Item 7
amends subsection 22-45(4), substituting a revised indexation factor formula
using the AWOTE for the quarter ending 31 December 2021 as the baseline. This
clarifies that instead of recommencing indexation using the AWOTE for the
quarter ending 31 December 2007, the AWOTE for the quarter ending 31 December
2021 applies, which will result in a lower rate of indexation than if the
previous rate had applied. By amending the thresholds in section 22-35 to
reflect the amounts in place prior to the pause in indexation, and restarting
indexation using the AWOTE for the quarter ending 31 December 2021 as a
baseline, the Government has effectively frozen the thresholds from 1 July 2015
to 1 July 2023.
Item 8
repeals subsection 22-45(5) to remove the different indexation factor for singles
tiers 2 and 3 single thresholds.
Item 10
provides that the amendments apply in relation to the 2021–22 financial year
and later financial years.
Concluding comments
The Bill implements a 2021–22 Budget
measure to continue the pause on indexation of income thresholds for the PHI
rebate and MLS for a further two years, bringing the total duration of the
pause to seven years. It also resets annual indexation arrangements to commence
from 1 July 2023.
While not affecting the majority of people
with private health insurance, the proposed amendments will mean that as
incomes rise across the tiered thresholds, more people will be eligible for
lower PHI rebates and face higher MLS rates than would be the case if
indexation of income thresholds were to proceed as currently provided by the PHI
Act. Adjustments to the formula for indexation to use current income
thresholds provide clarity on how indexation will recommence from the 2023–24
financial year. The measure will restrain growth in the cost of the PHI rebate
to the Government, with an estimated saving of $303.9 million over four
years. Much of this saving will be borne by policy-holders in the form of
higher PHI premiums and MLS payments for those without cover. The Government’s
stated intention to review these policy settings, which have been largely
unchanged for several years, may lead to future changes.