Posted on 11/23/2003 1:04:23 PM PST by kattracks
WASHINGTON (AP) New health savings accounts included in the Medicare legislation would let individuals save, invest and then spend money tax-free.To avoid all taxes, the dollars must pay for medical expenses. The lure of "tax-free asset accumulation," as advertised by the House Ways and Means Committee, coaxed some conservative Republicans into supporting a vast new Medicare drug benefit.
"I'm just thrilled by it," said Rep. John Kline, R-Minn. "It's fair to say the health savings accounts are what has me most excited about this bill."
Critics contend the accounts establish a tax shelter for the wealthy and set a precedent for future accounts to let affluent families evade taxes.
Sen. John Breaux of Louisiana, one of only two Democrats involved in Medicare negotiations, said the accounts do little to help the retirees that the new drug coverage aims to benefit.
"I don't like them. I think they're bad policy," he said.
The accounts, expected to bring in $6.4 billion less to the Treasury over a decade, would be available to individuals with high-deductible health insurance. The deductible must be at least $1,000 for an individual or $2,000 for a family.
Individuals, their employers or their family members could put away the amount of the annual deductible, up to $2,600 a year for individuals and $5,150 a year for families. People age 55 to 65 could make additional contributions to build a medical nest egg.
Money deposited in the accounts could be invested, then withdrawn free of taxes for insurance premiums, prescription drugs, long-term care services, Medicare premiums and other health costs. Employers would not pay payroll taxes on amounts they contribute as an employee benefits.
An account stays with a person for a lifetime. Upon death, assets can be transferred tax-free to a spouse.
The Ways and Means Committee chairman, Rep. Bill Thomas, R-Calif., said tax-free health spending is not as revolutionary as it may appear because employers already get tax deductions for money spent on their workers' health care.
The appeal of tax-free investing gives individuals incentive to use the new accounts and tax-free withdrawals make the money readily available for health needs, Thomas said.
"The last thing you want to do is have someone have a second thought about spending money on health care because there's a tax consequence," he said.
The next step, Thomas said, is legislation letting those with flexible spending accounts, also called cafeteria plans, deposit money leftover at the end of the year into the new health savings accounts.
Flexible spending accounts let employees set aside pretax dollars for expected health expenses. The funds cannot be invested, and any unspent money must be forfeited at year's end.
Some Republicans long have pressed for health savings accounts as a way to control spiraling health costs, asserting that people will force health care costs down by paying out of their pockets rather than with insurance.
"This is a critical step in reducing our reliance on third-party payers, creating more free market mechanisms in health care. It's extremely important," said Rep. Pat Toomey, R-Pa.
Opponents argue the accounts will increase health costs gradually for many people by drawing young, healthy and affluent people out of the general pool of health insurance into the high-deductible insurance plans.
"If health savings accounts prove popular, as congressional scorekeepers expect, low-deductible insurance will gradually become more expensive or even disappear. That would hurt the low-income and the sick," wrote tax expert Leonard Burman and health expert Linda Blumberg of the Urban Institute, a private think tank in Washington.
As troubling to the opponents, however, is the idea of totally tax-free savings for those wealthy enough to set the money aside.
"From a tax perspective, we think it's a precedent for this kind of tax-free treatment on both the front-end and the back-end, for changes in tax policy related to IRAs and 401(k)s," said Edwin Park, senior health policy analyst at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a think tank cited by Democrats.
Steve Moore, founder of the conservative Club for Growth, thinks that's a great idea.
"I'm in favor of dramatically broadening tax-free savings accounts," he said, proposing that individuals be allowed to establish tax-free accounts for education, child care and other needs.
"These are ways of short-circuiting the left's ability to create new government programs, because if people have enough money in these accounts, they don't need new government programs," he said.
I have never been any where near wealthy and I've been able to "set some money aside", and that's without getting any tax-free benefits.
What's your opinion on property taxes? It bugs me that no one can ever truly own property in the U.S. We're all perpetual renters, even after the mortgage is paid off.
I don't know, though, what sort of alternative tax could be used for funding schools, police, etc.
Okay, so at least there is one silver lining in this bad bill.
Here is a better question, would you prefer to die poor, homeless and bankrupt because you were forced to pay high taxes that paid for other people's mistakes? Or would you rather have just let those people destroy themselves?
Anyone who is critical of it probably has a very difficult time unwrapping chewing gum to say nothing of chewing it while walking!
Oh really, just check out some of the thread on FR about illegal immigrants
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