But employers in California as a whole do not offer particularly generous healthcare plans, according to data compiled by the Economic Policy Institute, so the state would not be among the hardest-hit if employer health plans were taxed.
When the policy institute assessed one proposal for taxing the most expensive health plans, which had been developed by a tax reform panel under President George W. Bush, it found that 36% of people with family plans in California would be taxed, compared with 41% for the nation overall.
In addition, California has a higher than average share of residents lacking health insurance, and so it might be among those to gain the most by expanding access to insurance. About 18.5% of state residents lack insurance, compared with 15.3% nationally, according to 2006 and 2007 data compiled by the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation, which studies health insurance trends.
To be sure, the precise effect of any healthcare bill is hard to assess before the details are known. And all states could benefit if the legislation succeeds in its goal of driving down healthcare costs.
Moreover, many people see improving access to health insurance as a broad national goal. "Everybody will benefit from universal coverage -- in red states and blue states," said Judith Feder, a professor of public policy at Georgetown University and senior fellow at the liberal Center for American Progress.
Still, the basic concepts Congress is considering could affect some regions more than others. So far, regional fault lines in Congress have been more pronounced in the debate over other issues, such as Obama's efforts to crack down on greenhouse gas emissions to slow climate change. But that may soon change as the debate gets more specific.
"Now the debate is mostly in the abstract," Blendon said. "But people soon will start saying: 'What will this mean for New York, L.A. and Philadelphia?' "
Critics of taxing higher-cost employer health plans say that it would hit many people who happen to live where costs are higher than average, not necessarily those whose packages are overly generous.
That is why the idea of taxing the priciest health benefits could run into resistance from lawmakers representing high-cost cities such as Chicago and New York.
"It doesn't have to do with Cadillac benefits; it has to do with geography," said Brian Biles, a professor at George Washington University and a former aide to the House Ways and Means Committee. "A package with this in it would attract strong opposition from members of Congress in the high-cost areas."
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janet.hook@latimes.com