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1 How CBO and JCT Analyze Major Proposals That Would Affect Health Insurance Coverage 1 (February 2018)

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                              ,, FEBRUARY 2018







   How CBO andJCT Analyze Major Proposals

That Would Affect Health Insurance Coverage


Summary
The Congressional Budget Office and the staff of the
Joint Committee on Taxation (JCT) estimate the bud-
getary effects of most types of major legislative proposals
that would affect both spending and revenues using a
process that involves many steps and many analysts.
This report focuses on the process that the agencies use
to analyze proposals affecting health insurance coverage
for people under age 65, such as legislation that would
make  major changes to the Affordable Care Act (ACA).

The undertaking is a joint effort: CBO takes the lead
in estimating the changes in coverage, premiums, and
federal spending, and JCT takes the lead in estimating
the tax-related budgetary effects, including those related
to changes in the exclusion for employment-based
insurance and premium  tax credits provided for coverage
obtained in the health insurance marketplaces established
under the ACA.  (This report does not discuss how the
agencies project a proposal's macroeconomic effects and
their budgetary impact.)2







1. For information about the agencies' general processes for
   producing estimates, see Congressional Budget Office, How
   CBO  Prepares Cost Estimates (February 2018), www.cbo.gov/
   publication/53519; and Joint Committee on Taxation, Revenue
   Estimating Process (January 2017), www.jct.gov/publications.
   html?func-startdown&id=4969.
2. For information about such estimates, see Congressional
   Budget Office, Dynamic Analysis, www.cbo.gov/topics/
   dynamic-analysis.


The process for analyzing health care legislation has
much  in common  with that used to analyze other types
of major proposals. It includes the following steps:

  Develop an analytic strategy. Analysts from the
   two agencies first review the proposal and identify
   the key effects it would have. They then examine
   implementation issues and assess the potential timing
   of effects. As part of the process of developing an
   analytic strategy, the agencies consult with outside
   experts and review existing evidence.

  Model the effects of the proposal. The agencies use
   several models-including CBO's  health insurance
   simulation model (HISIM), models  of Medicaid
   enrollment and costs, and JCT's individual tax
   model-to   analyze the proposal's effects on health
   insurance coverage and the federal budget. CBO
   and JCT  translate the features of the proposal
   into changes, relative to current law, in the price
   and generosity of health plans and in other factors
   affecting decisions of all parties involved-states,
   employers, insurers, individuals, and others-to
   model the proposal's effects on health insurance
   coverage and premiums. The agencies then use the
   results from those models as building blocks to
   project the proposal's budgetary effects-including
   those on the costs of the Medicaid program and on
   receipts of individual income taxes.

  Review and write about the estimate. When an
   estimate of the proposal's total budgetary effect is
   nearly complete, CBO and JCT  thoroughly review
   it and write up the results, along with a detailed
   explanation of how the agencies arrived at them.

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