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THE PRESIDENT TRIPLES HIS LONG-TERM CARE TAX CREDIT AND
URGES CONGRESS TO PASS A LONG-TERM CARE INITIATIVE IN 2000
January 19, 2000
Today, the Clinton Administration confirmed that the President's budget
will include a $3,000 tax credit for people with long-term care needs or
their caregivers -- tripling the credit over last year's proposal and
increasing the total investment in long-term care to $28 billion over 10
years. This credit is the centerpiece of the President's historic
long-term care initiative that has won praise from senior groups and health
policy experts. The initiative tackles the complex problem of long-term
care that affects millions of elderly, people with disabilities and
families who care people in need. In addition to the (1) tax credit, the
initiative will (2) provide funding for services which support family
caregivers of older persons; (3) improve equity in Medicaid eligibility for
people in home- and community-based settings; (4) encourage partnerships
between low-income housing for the elderly and Medicaid; and (5) encourage
the purchase of quality private long-term care insurance by Federal
employees. This initiative complements the Administration's effort,
spearheaded by the Vice President, to improve the quality of care in
nursing homes. The President will commend Congress on giving this
initiative serious consideration in the last session and urged it to finish
the job this year.
MILLIONS OF AMERICANS HAVE LONG-TERM CARE NEEDS
An increasing number of Americans have a range of long-term care needs.
Over five million Americans have significant limitations due to illness or
disability and thus require long-term care. Approximately, two-thirds are
older Americans. Also, millions of adults and a growing number of children
have long-term care needs because of health condition from birth or a
chronic illness developed later in life.
The aging of Americans will only increase the need for quality long-term
care options. The number of Americans age 65 years or older will double by
2030 (from 34.3 to 69.4 million), so that one in five Americans will be
elderly. The number of people 85 years or older, nearly half of whom need
assistance with everyday activities, will grow even faster.
FINANCIAL AS WELL AS SUPPORT SERVICES ARE NEEDED
Families, who are the primary caregivers for people with long-term care
needs, pay a big price for this care. Although it is difficult to
quantify, one study found that the economic value of care giving for
families ranges from $4,800 to $10,400 per caregiver. As such, this new
$3,000 tax credit could cover up to 60 percent of families? costs.
Many family caregivers need supportive services to ensure that they do
not place themselves at risk. Families and friends caring for people with
long term care needs often need information and assistance in getting to
supportive resources. Most of those who are the primary caregivers of
older persons who have limitations in their level of functioning are
elderly themselves. Frequently, these caregivers are providing physically
demanding and psychologically exhausting care which places their own health
and mental health at risk. These stresses tend to be even more severe for
families of persons with Alzheimer's Disease, who generally have greater
demands placed on their personal time, experience family conflicts, lack
adequate sleep, and are faced with financial hardships because of jobs
sacrificed or employment curtailed or compromised.
Private insurance is an important but relative new and untested option.
Only about 4 million Americans -- 1.5 percent of all Americans -- have
private long-term care insurance. Employers are only beginning to learn how
to provide these benefits to their workers.
PRESIDENT'S LONG-TERM CARE INITIATIVE. The Clinton Administration's
long-term care initiative, which invests $10 billion over 5 years and $28
billion over 10 years, includes:
Supporting families with long-term care needs through a $3,000 tax
credit. This initiative acknowledges and supports millions of Americans
with long-term care needs or the family members who care for and house
their ill or disabled relatives through a $3,000 tax credit. This credit
would be phased in beginning with $1,000 in 2001 and rising in $500
increments, so eligible people would receive $3,000 in 2005 and thereafter.
The credit would be phased out beginning at $110,000 for couples and
$75,000 for unmarried taxpayers. This new tax credit supports the diverse
needs of families by compensating a wide range of formal or informal
long-term care for people of all ages with three or more limitations in
activities of daily living (ADLs) or a comparable cognitive impairment. It
would provide needed financial support to about 2 million Americans,
including 1.2 million older Americans, over 500,000 non-elderly adults, and
approximately 250,000 children per year. It costs about $8.8 billion over
five years and $26.6 billion over 10 years.
Establishing a commitment to provide services to assist family caregivers
of older persons. Recent studies have found that services like respite care
can relieve caregiver stress and delay nursing home entry, and that support
for families of Alzheimer's patients can delay institutionalization for up
to a year. This nationwide program would support families who care for
elderly relatives with chronic illnesses or disabilities by enabling states
to utilize a visible, reliable network to provide: quality respite care
and other support services; critical information about community-based
long-term services that best meet a families' needs; and counseling and
support, such as teaching model approaches for caregivers that are coping
with new responsibilities and offering training for complex care needs,
such as techniques to manage wandering and agitated behavior in late-stage
Alzheimer's Disease. This program, which costs more than $1.25 billion
over 10 years, would assist approximately 250,000 families nationwide.
Improving Equity in Medicaid eligibility for people in home- and
community-based care settings. Historically, Medicaid policy and practice
has inadvertently discriminated against people with long-term care needs
who want to live in the community by making it much easier to provide
coverage in nursing homes than in the community. This proposal would
enable states to provide services to nursing-home qualified beneficiaries
at 300 percent of the Supplemental Security Income (SSI) limit (about
$15,000) without requiring a complicated and frequently time-consuming
Federal waiver. This proposal contributes towards this goal of giving
people with long-term care needs the choice of remaining in their homes and
communities. It costs $140 million over 5 years, $370 million over 10
years.
Encouraging partnerships between low-income housing for the elderly and
Medicaid. This proposal would provide $100 million in competitive grants to
qualified low-income elderly housing projects (Section 202 projects) to
convert some or all units into assisted living, so long as Medicaid home
and community-based services and services for non-Medicaid residents are
readily available. As people living in these housing facilities age, their
need for long-term care services rises, often leaving them with no choice
but to move to a nursing home. This proposal fund the conversion of their
units or the buildings that they live in into assisted living facilities.
Only sites that agree to bring Medicaid home and community-based services
into their converted assisted living facilities would qualify for grants,
to ensure that low-income elderly have access to this opportunity.
Having the Federal government serve as a model employer by offering
quality private long-term care insurance to Federal employees. The Office
of Personnel Management (OPM) to use its market leverage and set a national
example by offering non-subsidized, quality private long-term care
insurance to all federal employees, retirees, and their families at group
rates. This proposal will provide employers a nationwide model for
offering quality long-term care insurance. OPM anticipates that
approximately 300,000 Federal employees would participate in this program.