Beinsure. included Joel White’s responses to Sen. Susan Collins at a Senate HELP Committee hearing on ACA subsidies and affordability.
Collins highlighted a point that has stirred tension on both sides of the aisle: the enhanced premium tax credits have no income ceiling.
A family of four in Augusta earning $325,000 could still qualify for a taxpayer-funded subsidy. That raised her basic question to Joel White, president of the Council for Affordable Health Coverage: What should change now, and what structural fix should follow later?
White didn’t hedge. He said subsidies above 400% of the poverty line rely partly on taxes paid by working Americans with far lower incomes.
Someone at a bakery or a petrol station, he said, shouldn’t be footing the bill for a household making $200,000 to $400,000.
His argument rested on fairness rather than austerity: the system needs a cap that phases out, not a cliff edge that snaps benefits all at once.
White also noted the absence of any asset test on enhanced subsidies, which created another layer of mismatch between eligibility rules and actual financial need.