Heritage Foundation provides the following fun
information on Obamacare tax hikes, three of which take effect in this New
Year:
Obamacare
contains 18 specific tax hikes, mandates, or penalties that
cost Americans money, and three new ones take effect in 2014. This is only the
beginning—watch how two of these taxes get worse in the years to come.
1. Individual Mandate Tax. The
individual mandate is designed to strong-arm individuals into purchasing
government-approved health insurance or facing a tax penalty. In 2014, the
penalty for not purchasing insurance will be either $95 or 1 percent of annual
income (whichever is greater). Very few, if any, people will end up paying just
$95, because individuals with an annual income of only $9,500 or less would
likely qualify for Medicaid or a hardship exemption from the mandate. The
mandate increases drastically in coming years, rising to $325 or 2 percent of
income in 2015, and $695 or 2.5 percent of income in 2016—whichever is greater.
2. Health Insurer Tax. One of the
largest tax increases in the law is an annual fee imposed on health insurers
based on their share of the market. It is estimated to raise $8 billion in 2014
alone. The tax will more than likely be passed on to consumers through premium
increases. An actuarial analysis by the consulting firm Oliver Wyman projects
that in 2014, this tax will increase premiums by 1.9 percent to 2.3 percent.
And the impact will be greater in later years as the tax increases.
3. Reinsurance Fee. This fee
isn’t included in the list of 18 tax hikes, but it’s another one that
will impact the cost of insurance. Health insurers will have to pay the
temporary fee on group health plans to help spread the cost of the covering
those in the individual market, inside and outside Obamacare’s exchanges. The
fee begins in 2014, costing $63 per covered person and decreasing in 2015 and
2016. Like most taxes and fees, the result will likely be higher insurance
premiums.
Sneak Peek at 2015: Employer Mandate. By law, the employer mandate was
supposed to begin in 2014, but the Obama Administration delayed enforcing it
until 2015. The employer mandate forces employers with 50 or
more full-time employees (defined as those working 30 hours per week) to offer
government-approved health coverage or pay a penalty. The penalty varies—either
$2,000 per employee after the first 30 workers, or $3,000 per employee
receiving subsidized coverage in the exchange, whichever is less.
Regardless of
the delay, many businesses have already adapted by reducing hours for their
employees—falling under the threshold to avoid both the cost of coverage and
the penalty.
We need health
reform that works for Americans—not against them.
Well, yes!
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