Most countries that built modern health systems did so through deliberate policy design. The United States built its system around an accident โ a World War II workaround that became permanent because too many interests depended on it. The decision to tie health insurance to employment is not a feature of American healthcare. It is the structural fault that nearly every other dysfunction grew out of.
A wartime workaround that ossified
During World War II, federal wage controls prevented employers from raising salaries to attract workers in a tight labor market. The IRS ruled in 1943, and Congress codified in 1954, that employer-paid health benefits were not taxable to employees. Companies began offering health coverage as untaxed compensation. The arrangement was never designed as a coherent national health policy. It was a tax loophole that solved an immediate hiring problem. Eight decades later, the loophole has hardened into the central organizing principle of American medicine.
The tax exclusion distorts everything downstream
The exclusion of employer-paid premiums from taxable income is the single largest tax expenditure in the federal budget โ a subsidy worth hundreds of billions annually that flows mostly to higher-income workers at larger employers. Because the subsidy is invisible and uncapped, it pushes employers and employees toward more generous coverage than they would buy with after-tax dollars, which inflates demand for medical services, which raises prices, which raises premiums. Every economist who studies the system, across the political spectrum, agrees the exclusion is a major driver of cost growth. Almost no political coalition will touch it.
Job lock distorts the labor market
Tying coverage to employment means losing or changing jobs means losing or changing coverage. Workers stay in jobs they would otherwise leave, decline entrepreneurship they would otherwise pursue, and take jobs primarily for benefits rather than fit. Researchers have documented this “job lock” effect for decades. It functions as a hidden tax on labor mobility and small business formation, and it falls hardest on workers with chronic conditions or family members with medical needs โ exactly the people for whom mobility matters most.
Coverage gaps and inequities follow directly
The structure leaves predictable gaps. People between jobs, in part-time roles, in gig work, in small businesses that can’t afford group plans, or in industries with weak benefits norms are routinely uninsured or underinsured. The Affordable Care Act marketplaces and Medicaid expansion partially patched the holes, but the system still treats employer coverage as the default and everything else as a workaround. The inequities that result โ by income, by race, by industry, by region โ are downstream of the original architectural choice.
The takeaway
Almost every reform conversation in US healthcare runs into the gravitational pull of employer-sponsored insurance. Single payer, public option, expanded marketplaces, universal catastrophic โ all of them have to navigate around the existing employer system and the political coalitions invested in keeping it. Acknowledging that the design is an accident, not a principle, is the necessary starting point for any serious conversation about what comes next.
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