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Bush to float health insurance tax break
yahoo (via AP) ^ | 1/20/2007 | DEB RIECHMANN

Posted on 01/20/2007 8:18:47 AM PST by PtrainerNYC

WASHINGTON - President Bush will propose in his State of the Union address a tax break for people who buy their own health insurance and a limit on how much coverage individuals can receive tax free at work. ADVERTISEMENT

The proposal to be announced Tuesday offers a tax deduction to people who purchase coverage and urges those with generous plans to either embrace cheaper insurance or pay taxes on part of it, according to a Bush administration official familiar with the proposals.

If passed by Congress, the plan would be the first time that workers could get a tax break for buying their own insurance. At the same time, it would be the first time that some employer-provided health care benefits could be taxed.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: healthinsurance
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To: CrawDaddyCA
Both parties are "tone" deaf....

Politicians are such scum bags.......

I working my butt off and the taxing authorities are killing me.

21 posted on 01/20/2007 9:01:30 AM PST by pointsal (q)
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To: PtrainerNYC

Solution:

http://fairtax.org


22 posted on 01/20/2007 9:02:31 AM PST by groanup (Limited government is the answer. Now, what's the question?)
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To: Hildy

I am not saying I should be, I am just identifying this as a problem area for alot of people.


23 posted on 01/20/2007 9:02:32 AM PST by oceanview
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To: PtrainerNYC

Here's the deal folks. It's better for you as an employee to have the right to deduct the cost of getting your own insurance. The company that you work for should not have this right solely. THIS IS GOOD NOT BAD. This way, an individual can get a Health Savings Account and deduct its cost. Why should the employer be the only one with this benefit? HSAs are GOOD, because they will help us keep health care costs down and you get to keep the cash that you do not use. They are proven.

Granted, if you don't get the insurance, you don't get the tax break. That's no big deal, because you weren't getting it before.

You can take this insurance with you wherever you work. It is transportable. It is yours. There are tons of benefits.


24 posted on 01/20/2007 9:02:52 AM PST by cowtowney
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To: groanup

indeed. before I embrace having my employer provided plan (the part of it I don't pay for with co-pays) taxed as income, I'd be in favor of universal medicare funded by a broad based consumption tax.

we have to stop taxing the hell out of wages in this country.


25 posted on 01/20/2007 9:04:45 AM PST by oceanview
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To: cowtowney

that part of the plan is fine, the new tax is not.


26 posted on 01/20/2007 9:05:28 AM PST by oceanview
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To: CrawDaddyCA
Can someone explain the difference between Democrats and Republicans again? Lately, I'm having a hard time differentiating between the two.

Democrats tax and spend.

Republicans spend and tax.

27 posted on 01/20/2007 9:07:09 AM PST by Mad_Tom_Rackham (Well, it's 2007. Time to get ready for 2008.)
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To: oceanview

Potentially - the idea is not to tax you, but to get people to go out and buy their own health insurance on the open market. Putting people in massive group plans drives costs up, does nothing to encourage individual responsibility (in that it pools the costs of the healthy and the least healthy), and denies individual flexibility.

The ideal system would feature individually-purchased low-premium, high-deductible insurance combined with various tax measures, and health savings accounts.

The present "insurance" system is horribly wasteful in large part because it's expected to behave in a way which no other type of "insurance" does - namely, to cover the day-to-day costs of health care. Imagine what auto insurance would cost if it covered the cost of oil changes and wheel reblanacnings.


28 posted on 01/20/2007 9:11:05 AM PST by furquhart (Time for a New Crusade - Deus lo Volt!)
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To: oceanview
If people paid for minor health care themselves and left major care (surgery, etc.) to insurance, costs could drop significantly.

But then again, Bush needs a tax increase to pay for medical care of the millions of illegal immigrants he is letting flood into our country.

29 posted on 01/20/2007 9:14:49 AM PST by Mad_Tom_Rackham (Well, it's 2007. Time to get ready for 2008.)
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To: Owen

What you say is true. Getting health insurance these days can be a nightmare for our kids.

But you don't solve the problem by piling more and more bureaucratic layers on top of it. That road was taken by Canada and Europe, and it is destroying their economies and medical systems.

One reason why healthcare is so expensive is that the lawyers and insurers are getting more and more of the money and the doctors less and less. Paperwork is crushing, too. Where a small group practice used to have one secretary, they now have to hire five, just to fill out all the required forms.

Hillarycare failed, but clinton managed to pile a number of reforms on anyway. It's noticeable that costs have skyrocketed ever since, and a lot of huge insurance buildings were built with the proceeds.


30 posted on 01/20/2007 9:16:16 AM PST by Cicero (Marcus Tullius)
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To: oceanview
so let's use the tax to punish everyone down to a level where they are getting crappy coverage. that sounds like your plan.

What we have here is a failure to communicate.

As a matter of good tax policy, all income should be treated equally. If it were up to me, I would count all employer paid benefits as income. I would also count all government transfer payments as income. Broaden the base and reduce the rates.

On a parallel track, good health policy would shift us from third-party payment to individual control. Get the employers out of the loop. And again, if there is to be any subsidy at all (apart from the poor, who will have to be subsidized in any system), it makes no sense to award the subsidy arbitrarily, based on employer choices.

In general, the bigger the employer the higher the wages and the richer the benefit package. That's fine. But there is no reason to provide a tax-code distorting, health-system distorting regressive subsidy on top of that.

For the record, I now work for a large employer, am well paid, and have good benefits. I am goring my own ox here, but if we are serious about tax and health-care reform, we have to be willing to let the chips fall where they may.

For a similar set of reasons, we should phase out the home mortgage interest deduction (which is mostly an illusion anyhow). We wrongfoot ourselves if we complain about housing subsidies for the poor while receiving significantly greater subsidies ourselves. The only difference is that their subsidies are paid by HUD and ours are laundered through the IRS.

31 posted on 01/20/2007 9:17:54 AM PST by sphinx
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To: Owen
hg
The problem of pre-existing conditions is crushing
 
There is a way around this.  Until just recently I would have agreed with you. I'm preparing to move my permanent residence back to the Kansas City area and would prefer to live on the Johnson County Kansas side of the city where I spent most of my adult life both working and living. However, during the last 15 years my residence of record has been Lake Ozark Missouri and I have had Blue Cross/Blue Shield of Missouri.
 
If I move back to Kansas I have to change insurers. It will still be BC/BS but of Kansas instead of of Missouri, a different policy and hence, my diabetes will be considered a pre-existing condition and will no longer be covered.
 
Essentially, I thought I would be a prisoner of the state of Missouri the rest of my life.  But the exception is this:  AARP offers group medical insurance that appears to be as good as my private Blue Cross at a group price.  Any doctor I want, same deductibles etc.  And one can join AARP at age 50.

 

32 posted on 01/20/2007 9:29:05 AM PST by HawaiianGecko (Victory goes to the player who makes the next-to-last mistake.)
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To: Cicero
I think this is one of the Bush Admins plans to preempt Hillary.

I bet you will see more Health Care issues being pushed from the President in the new future, because Hillary will be coming out with Plans very soon.
33 posted on 01/20/2007 9:29:18 AM PST by FLOutdoorsman (The Man who says it can't be done should not interrupt the man doing it!)
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To: PtrainerNYC
"Basically if you dont have health insurance you get a tax break. If your job gives you health insurance you'll pay tax on it to cover the new tax break. Redistribution at its worst!"

You've got it all wrong. When you receive insurance from your work, it is tax free. However, if you pay for it yourself, you get taxed on the dollars you used to pay for it. Bush is trying to put them on equal footing, which is the right thing to do. Plus, and this is what really needs to be done, TOO MUCH INSURANCE COVERAGE AND FREE COVERAGE FROM EMPLOYERS IS WHAT IS CAUSING HIGH HEALTH CARE COSTS. Until people understand that, and it does sound counterintuitive, we will have health care problems.
34 posted on 01/20/2007 9:29:48 AM PST by Hendrix
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To: sphinx

Still sounds like a TAX INCREASE to me (and it will be a tax increase for me as I have very good employer-provided coverage.)

What a dumb idea. This State-of-the-Union speech already has "disaster" written all over it. You can bet your last dollar that the MSM will be talking about the "Bush tax increase" for weeks after the speech (recalling the experience of his father).


35 posted on 01/20/2007 9:30:35 AM PST by nj26 (Border Security=Homeland Security... Put Our Military on the Border! (Proud2BNRA))
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To: Hendrix

"TOO MUCH INSURANCE COVERAGE AND FREE COVERAGE FROM EMPLOYERS IS WHAT IS CAUSING HIGH HEALTH CARE COSTS. Until people understand that, and it does sound counterintuitive, we will have health care problems."

There's a vote loser. Recalls the phrase: "We are going to take things away from you for the common good."

I have good health care coverage from my employer, and I don't want it taken away (or taxed) by Bush or any other politician.

Bush is acting like a Socialist. Rehearsal for President Hillary.


36 posted on 01/20/2007 9:32:03 AM PST by nj26 (Border Security=Homeland Security... Put Our Military on the Border! (Proud2BNRA))
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To: FLOutdoorsman

"I think this is one of the Bush Admins plans to preempt Hillary."

He's certainly acting like a Socialist tax raiser. Warm-up for President Hillary.


37 posted on 01/20/2007 9:33:02 AM PST by nj26 (Border Security=Homeland Security... Put Our Military on the Border! (Proud2BNRA))
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To: oceanview
if I want to retire at 58, unless I can buy into my (former) employers plan - its hard to get gap insurance to bridge to medicare.

you can move to Califronia and let the state supply you with insurance thanks to the Governator....
38 posted on 01/20/2007 9:33:30 AM PST by Kozak (Anti Shahada: " There is no God named Allah, and Muhammed is his False Prophet")
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To: Bogeygolfer
"That's not even close to a fair analysis. As it stands people with individual coverage are left paying with after tax dollars while group coverage gets a 100% deduction. This is an effort to balance that as well as to continue to encourage higher deductibles which eliminate waste in the system. People run to the emergency room with colds or pains on a regular basis as well as uncounted trips to the doctors which could be handled with over the counter meds. Waste is a killer and the high deductible do wonders. The break in premium so far outweighs the higher deductible since the insurance carrier knows the end result will be far less claims when it's our money we're spending they can pass it along and still come out ahead. So far it's working extremely well and health savings accounts are booming."

BINGO! We have somebody on this board who actually understands the problem and the solution.
39 posted on 01/20/2007 9:34:09 AM PST by Hendrix
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To: flynmudd

Dear flynmudd,

"Sub-S employees that own more than 2% of the company already pay Federal and State taxes on health insurance coverage."

That was once true, but I don't think it is anymore.

During the late 1990s and early 2000s, deductibility of health insurance premiums for folks who own their own businesses was phased in. I remember when I didn't receive any deduction for my premiums, but I remember that over the years, I received increasingly higher percentages of deductibility, until now, it's either 80% or 100% (I don't remember off the top of my head).

However, we just started a plan with an HSA component, and as the owner, I don't get the deduction for contributions to my own Health Savings Account (although, of course, my business gets a deduction for contributions to my workers' accounts).


sitetest


40 posted on 01/20/2007 9:34:40 AM PST by sitetest (If Roe is not overturned, no unborn child will ever be protected in law.)
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