AMA Mandate Mistake
by John Goodman
The American Medical Association wants to require everyone who earns more
than five times the poverty level to have health insurance. The thresholds
are $49,000+ for individuals and $100,000+ for a family of four.
Failure to comply would not earn jail time. It would result in higher
taxes.
The AMA's mistake (quite common in health policy circles) is a failure to
recognize that the uninsured already pay higher taxes because they are
uninsured. At $49,000 income, an individual who gets a $6,000 health
insurance plan from an employer avoids a 25% federal income tax, a 15.3%
FICA tax and, say, a 4% state and local income tax.
If he were uninsured, enjoying taxable wages instead of health insurance,
the individual would pay $2,640 of extra taxes each year precisely because
he is uninsured.
The problem is not the absence of financial penalties; we already have them.
The problem is that the penalties primarily go to Washington, DC; whereas
the free care (if needed) is delivered locally.
The solution is to coordinate tax and spending programs (Gov. Romney is
trying to do this in Massachusetts). There is no need for a mandate.
Go to this link to read the full AMA article:
http://www.amaassn.org/ama/pub/category/16460.html.
John Goodman is President and CEO of the National Center for Policy Analysis
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