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American Principles Project Blog

Contributions by the American Principle Project and its collaborators
Nov 05
2009

Report: Health Care Reform Assumes Millions Will Pay Fines"

Posted by: Thomas Peters in

Tagged in: taxes , health care , big government

Thomas Peters

So much for the promise that no one making under $200,000 would see their taxes increased after Barack Obama was elected. I wonder if he considers a fine to be a tax?

"The health care reform bill awaiting debate in the House assumes millions of workers and employers would rather pay $167 billion in fines than purchase or provide adequate coverage, according to a recent analysis, raising questions about whether the plan does enough to make insurance affordable.

Though the bill is estimated to expand coverage from the current 83 percent to 96 percent of legal U.S. residents, the windfall of projected penalty payments also exposes a potential contradiction in reform. A significant part of the plan to expand coverage relies financially on fines from the uninsured.

The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office estimated in its study last week that the House bill would bring in $167 billion over 10 years -- $33 billion from fines paid by individuals who decline to buy insurance, and the rest from employers who don't offer insurance to workers or contribute enough toward premiums.

Ernest Istook, a former Republican congressman from Oklahoma who is now a fellow at the conservative Heritage Foundation, calculated that anywhere between 8 million and 14 million people would end up paying the fines." (FOX News)

Enough is enough, please visit our APIA page dedicated to health care and take action now!

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