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Administration open to taxing health
benefits
Proposal problematic for Obama as he denounced similar
one in campaign
The Obama administration is signaling to Congress that
the president could support taxing some employee health
benefits, as several influential lawmakers and many
economists favor, to help pay for overhauling the health
care system.
The proposal is politically problematic for President
Obama, however, since it is similar to one he denounced
in the presidential campaign as “the largest middle-class
tax increase in history.” Most Americans with insurance
get it from their employers, and taxing workers for the
benefit is opposed by union leaders and some businesses.
In television advertisements last fall, Mr. Obama
criticized his Republican rival for the presidency,
Senator John McCain of Arizona, for proposing to tax all
employer-provided health benefits. The benefits have long
been tax-free, regardless of how generous they are or how
much an employee earns. The advertisements did not point
out that Mr. McCain, in exchange, wanted to give all
families a tax credit to subsidize the purchase of
coverage.
At the time, even some Obama supporters said privately
that he might come to regret his position if he won the
election; in effect, they said, he was potentially giving
up an important option to help finance his ambitious
health care agenda to reduce medical costs and to expand
coverage to the 46 million uninsured Americans. Now that
Mr. Obama has begun the health debate, several advisers
say that while he will not propose changing the tax-free
status of employee health benefits, neither will he
oppose it if Congress does so.
At a recent Congressional hearing, Senator Ron Wyden, an
Oregon Democrat whose own health plan would make benefits
taxable, asked Peter R. Orszag, the president’s budget
director, about the issue. Mr. Orszag replied that it
“most firmly should remain on the table.”
Mr. Orszag, an economist who has served as director of
the Congressional Budget Office, has written favorably of
taxing some employer-provided health benefits and using
the revenue savings for other health-related incentives.
So has another Obama adviser, Jason Furman, the deputy
director of the White House National Economic Council.
They, like other proponents, cite evidence that tax-free
benefits encourage what Mr. McCain called “gold-plated”
policies, resulting in inefficient and costly demands for
health care and pressure on employers to hold down
workers’ pay as insurance expenses rise. And, they say,
the policy discriminates against those — many of whom are
low-income workers — who do not have employer-provided
coverage.
When Senator Max Baucus, Democrat of Montana, advocated
taxing benefits at a recent hearing of the Finance
Committee, which he leads, Treasury Secretary Timothy F.
Geithner assured him that the administration was open to
all ideas from Congress. Mr. Geithner did, however,
allude to the position that Mr. Obama had taken as a
candidate.
The administration’s receptivity to the idea is owed
partly to the advocacy of Mr. Baucus, whose committee has
jurisdiction over tax policy and health programs, and to
support from Republicans. There is less enthusiasm among
Democrats in the House, though the health debate is at an
early stage and no comprehensive plans are on the table.
Also, Mr. Obama’s own idea for raising revenues for
health care — limiting the income tax deductions that the
most affluent taxpayers claim — has run into opposition
not only from Mr. Baucus but also from his counterpart in
the House, Representative Charles B. Rangel, Democrat of
New York, who is chairman of the Ways and Means
Committee.
Mr. Obama’s proposed limit on deductions would raise an
estimated $318 billion over 10 years, or half of his
proposed “health care reserve fund.” That is a fraction
of the revenues that could be raised from taxing
employer-provided health benefits.
In the campaign, Mr. McCain estimated that taxing all
health benefits would raise $3.6 trillion over a decade —
“a multitrillion-dollar tax hike,” one Obama
advertisement said.
The Congressional Budget Office says that including
health benefits in taxable income could mean $246 billion
in additional revenue for a single year. Stopping short
of full taxation, as Mr. Baucus and others suggest, would
mean less new revenue.
The latest government figures, for 2007, show that 70
percent of the 253 million people with health insurance
received at least some of their coverage through
employers. Employment-based insurance covers three-fifths
of the population under 65.
Those who want to tax benefits in whole or in part make
two main arguments. They say the tax exclusion is a
generous subsidy that insulates employees from the true
costs of health care, leading them to demand more of it
and driving up overall costs. Critics also say the policy
is unfair because it favors higher-income people. “It’s
too regressive,” Mr. Baucus said. “It just skews the
system.”
But in a blueprint for health legislation that he issued
last November, Mr. Baucus said taking the exclusion on
health benefits out of the tax code would go “too far”
and “cause widespread disruption in employer-based health
benefits.” Mr. Obama has also said he wants to preserve
employer-provided coverage. Mr. Baucus, in his paper,
cited other options, like taxing benefits above some
value, taxing only wealthy employees or both.
However the proposal is devised, advocates will not have
an easy time selling it.
Republicans, like Mr. McCain and former President George
W. Bush before him, tend to favor taxing the benefits to
finance other incentives for people to buy their own
insurance. But given Mr. Obama’s use of the issue in his
campaign, Republicans are unlikely to support a change
unless the president himself proposes it, a senior
adviser to Senate Republicans said.
Many Democrats, especially House liberals, are opposed.
“It’s a dumb idea,” said Representative Pete Stark of
California, chairman of the Ways and Means Subcommittee
on Health. “We have to maintain as much as we can of the
employer payments.”
Administration officials often say they will not repeat
the mistakes of former President Bill Clinton, whose plan
for universal health insurance collapsed in 1994. But
Frank B. McArdle, a health policy expert at Hewitt
Associates, a benefits consulting firm, said, “If
President Obama agrees to cut back the tax break for
employee health benefits, he will risk repeating one of
Mr. Clinton’s errors by disrupting health insurance for
people who have it and like it.”
Some big businesses consider nontaxable employment
benefits a tool for recruiting and retaining workers. The
United States Chamber of Commerce opposes eliminating the
exclusion on health benefits, but James P. Gelfand,
senior manager of health policy, said the group had not
taken a position on limiting it.
Organized labor, a pillar of the Democratic Party base,
considers the benefits among the union movement’s
historic achievements for the middle class. But a split
could be developing between the manufacturing unions,
which have negotiated rich benefit packages, and the
growing service employees unions, which include many
low-wage workers without generous benefits.
Alan V. Reuther, legislative director of the United
Automobile Workers, said: “These proposals would
represent a tax increase on working families. They would
undermine good health care coverage.”
But at the Service Employees International Union, which
was an early supporter of Mr. Obama, Dennis Rivera, the
coordinator of the union’s health care campaign, said
that while his organization was “predisposed not to agree
to the taxing of health benefits,” he would wait to pass
judgment. The union, Mr. Rivera said, wants to see how
any tax changes fit into the overall effort to revamp the
health care system. “We need to see the total picture,”
he said.
Original at: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/29703278
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