Fantastic News: NHS Declares Sex a Biological FACT, Bans Men From Women's Hospital...
Native Council Approves Student Demonstrators Occupying Their Land for Protest
SO WHAT? BBC Gets Community Note Treatment for Pointing Out Train Drivers Are...
Pelosi Gets Pissed, Morning Joe Meltdown, Minorities Turn on Kamala!
News to Us: Donald Trump Wants to Track Your Menstrual Cycles
Resident Congressional Fire Alarm Delinquent Jamaal Bowman Sides with Pro Hamas Columbia P...
Down the Drain: After Billions in U.S. Aid, Ukraine Army Chief Says Tactical...
Massive Corporations Are Using Government to Eliminate Credit Card Rewards (Sponsored)
Northwestern Announces Full-Ride Scholarships for Palestinian Students
Coleman Hughes Offers Thoughtful Reflection on Columbia Protests and Free Speech
Birds of a Feather: Obama Buddy Bill Ayers Supporting Chaos at University of...
Just for Fun: Photo of President Trump Leaving Court Inspires Hilarious Memes
This Means War: Middle School Girls SUSPENDED After Refusing to Compete Against Trans...
The Indoctrination on TikTok Continues: Here’s What ‘Trans’ Activists Are Teaching Your Ki...
Fox News Follows the SHOCKING Dark Money Sources Funding the Pro Palestine Riots

Buckle up: IRS gears up to impose Obamacare's 'Cadillac' tax

https://twitter.com/SaaShr/status/288653923198324737

For now, it’s just a new reporting requirement:

The Affordable Care Act requires employers to report the cost of coverage under an employer-sponsored group health plan. Reporting the cost of health care coverage on the Form W-2 does not mean that the coverage is taxable. The value of the employer’s excludable contribution to health coverage continues to be excludable from an employee’s income, and it is not taxable. This reporting is for informational purposes only and will provide employees useful and comparable consumer information on the cost of their health care coverage.

Advertisement

In five years, however, the IRS will use the information on the W-2 forms to impose a hefty 40 percent “excise tax” on so-called “Cadillac” employer-provided health insurance plans:

It begins at $10,200 for an individual plan and $27,500 for a family plan. Above that, there’s a 40 percent tax on the excess premiums. So if your plan is valued at $11,200, your employer will pay a 40 percent tax on the $1,000 surplus.

Those thresholds sound high at the moment, but health care costs are rising rapidly. A family health plan that costs $18,000 today will cost $29,000 in 2018 if costs rise 10 percent per year during the next five years.  Moreover, the thresholds will rise more slowly than health-care costs, which means the number of plans that are taxed will steadily increase after 2018.

So, a tax that was supposed to affect gold-plated plans belonging to wealthy fat cats will likely end up  many affecting middle-class workers.  A study by the Pioneer Institute estimates that the tax will eventually be imposed on the health insurance benefits of more than 50 percent of Massachusetts workers, including small business owners, teachers, and police officers.

Advertisement

A school superintendent in Litchfield, Minn., is already looking ahead:

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Twitchy Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement