List of Tax Hikes In The Baucus Bill....

dieseldiva

Veteran Expediter
New today......From Americans for Tax Reform

ALERT: List of All Tax Hikes In the Baucus Draft

From Ryan Ellis on Wednesday, September 16, 2009 11:03 AM

Senator Baucus today released an outline of the Senate Finance Committee draft on healthcare. Here is a list of all the tax hikes:


  • Individual Mandate Tax. If you don’t sign up for health insurance, you will have to pay a tax in the following range:
Single Family 100-300%

FPL $750 $1500 300%

FPL < $900 $3800
  • Employer Mandate Tax. $400 per employee if health coverage is not offered. Note: this is a huge incentive to drop coverage, as $400 is much less than the average plan cost of $11,000 for families or $5000 for singles (Source: AHIP)

  • Backdoor Death of HSAs. By requiring that all plans (besides the few that are grandfathered) provided first-dollar coverage for most services, there would be no HSA-qualifying plans available from the Massachusetts-like exchanges

  • Excise Tax on High-Cost Health Plans. New 35% excise tax on health insurance plans to the extent they exceed $21000 in cost ($8000 single)

  • Report Employer Health Spending on W-2. This is clearly a setup for the easy individual taxation of employer-provided health insurance down the road.

  • Cap Flex-Spending Account (FSA) Contributions at $2000. Currently unlimited.

  • Eliminate tax deduction for employer-provided retirement Rx drug coverage in coordination with Medicare Part D

  • Medicine Cabinet Tax. Americans would no longer be able to purchase over-the-counter medicines with their FSA, HSA, or HRA

  • Increase Non-Qualified HSA Distribution Penalty from 10% to 20%. This makes HSAs less attractive, and paves the way for HSA pre-verification

  • Corporate 1099-MISC Information Reporting. Currently, only non-corporations providing property or services for a business must be issued at 1099-MISC. This would expand the requirement to corporations doing business with other businesses. The amount of reporting needed for an average business would be huge. Paves the way for full information reporting to the IRS.

  • Various industry tax grabs based on market share. $2.3 billion PhRMA; $6 billion health insurance providers; $750 million clinical labs; $4 billion medical device manufacturers
 
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dieseldiva

Veteran Expediter
One Man's Analysis......

The American Spectator

By Philip Klein on 9.16.09 @ 5:43PM

Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus on Wednesday released a much-anticipated $856 billion health care bill intended as a compromise measure. While better in some respects from other Democratic proposals, it would still put American on the pathway to a government-run health care system.

After months of bipartisan negotiations, Baucus delivered a 223-page summary of legislation that has yet to attract the support of a single Republican, while drawing fire from Democrats and liberal activist groups.

Unlike bills already released by House Democrats and by the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, the Baucus bill does not create a new government-run plan modeled after Medicare. But the non-profit co-ops Baucus envisions as a substitute should not ease the concerns of supporters of smaller government. Far from being a free market alternative to a government plan, the co-ops would be created with $6 billion in federal funding and benefit from an exemption from federal income tax that is effectively the same as a subsidy.
The co-ops would be offered alongside private insurance on government-run insurance exchanges that the federal government would require each state to create. But private insurance would not be private in any meaningful sense of the word, because the Baucus bill forces insurers to participate in the exchanges, specifies minimum benefits that the plans must offer, and puts restrictions on how much they can charge customers.

While the legislation does not explicitly require individuals to drop their current coverage immediately, it puts incentives in place that could cause many to lose it anyway. The bill allows individuals to keep their current "grandfathered" plans, but only until 2013 - and if they keep them, they won't be eligible for any of the tax subsidies enjoyed by those who switch to government-designed polices.

Over time, the Baucus bill would encourage employers to drop coverage they offer to workers and steer those businesses toward purchasing insurance on the government-run exchange. Small businesses with 25 or fewer employees, for instance, would be eligible for tax credits to purchase insurance for their workers, but starting in 2013, they could only claim those credits if they go through the exchange. And while the bill wouldn't require the states to open exchanges to businesses with more than 50 employees immediately, in 2017, states would be forced to submit a five year "phase in" schedule that would eventually open up the exchanges to all employers. In other words, within 15 years, even if most of the nation isn't receiving government benefits directly or participating in a government plan, they may very will be buying their insurance at a government store.

Even though President Obama has insisted that under health care legislation, "The middle-class will realize greater security, not higher taxes," the Baucus bill would include a steep middle-class tax hike in the form of a mandate requiring that individuals purchase health insurance. Or as the bill summary reads: "The consequence for not maintaining insurance would be an excise tax."

Under the plan, individuals would face a tax of at least $750 if they do not purchase health coverage. And while the proposal would provide subsidies to lower-income Americans, those subsidies would stop at 300 percent of the federal poverty level. What that means is that a family of four with a household income above $66,150 would face a tax of $3,800 if they do not obtain health insurance, while an individual with income above $32,490 would face a tax of $950.

Baucus would waive the requirement for individuals who can prove they can't afford a minimal health insurance policy as defined by the government, but even then, premiums would have to exceed 10 percent of adjusted gross income - or over $3,000 for somebody with income of $32,490.

At the lower end of the income scale, the bill would expand Medicaid eligibility to 133 percent of the poverty level, which, according to past estimates by the Congressional Budget Office, would add 11 million beneficiaries to the program.
In addition to proposed cuts in Medicare spending and promises to save money by eliminating waste, fraud, and abuse, the bill would be financed through a series of new taxes. Chief among them is a tax on high-end health plans that have annual premiums exceeding $8,000 for individuals and $21,000 for families, a measure that has already drawn the ire of unions.

In addition, the bill proposes a $6 billion a year tax on insurers; a $4 billion a year tax on medical device makers; a $2.3 billion a year tax on pharmaceutical companies; and a $750 million a year tax on clinical laboratories.

In parts of the legislation, it's clear that Baucus attempted to take Republican criticism and ideas into account. The bill includes ID verification requirements for those collecting health care tax subsidies in an attempt to prevent illegal immigrants from receiving benefits, and it aims to segregate funds so that no subsidies can be used to fund the abortion component of private health plans. The bill would not add an end of life care benefit to Medicare, and does not include a firm employer mandate (though it does charge a fee to employers if they do not provide coverage and some of their workers use tax subsidies to purchase insurance).

In addition, the bill would open the door slightly for the interstate purchase of insurance, an idea long-touted by conservatives. But instead of permitting Americans to purchase coverage across state lines outright, it would simply enable states to join together in "compacts," allowing citizens in one state to buy coverage from any other participating state.

Despite these concessions, the Baucus bill should still be viewed as unacceptable to supporters of limited government. Beyond the hefty price tag, if passed, America would end up with a system in which individuals are forced to purchase insurance or pay a steep tax penalty, Medicaid is expanded significantly, all insurance policies are designed by the federal government, and Americans are driven into purchasing insurance at a government store.


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Philip Klein is The American Spectator's Washington correspondent.
 

Poorboy

Expert Expediter
But, But Barack Said he wouldn't Raise Taxes and That His Health Care Plan was Free!! He didn't Lie now Did He? You Betcha he did, the Piece of Human Excrement!!
 

greg334

Veteran Expediter
None of that really matters, because the key to all of it is the mandated health care insurance or else part of the bill. No longer are you free to choose if you even want to get health care insurance, you will get health care insurance.

For someone like me, who fell through the cracks, the idea of being fined is something that is not acceptable at all.
 
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