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Eliminating the federal income tax exclusion for employer-sponsored health benefits does not seem to be a hot policy topic in Washington right now, but the idea is still in the air.
Veronique de Rugy and Jack Salmon, two analysts at the Mercatus Center, a libertarian think tank affiliated with George Mason University, showed that the possibility of employer health tax exclusion repeal still lives last week, by including that idea in an analysis of federal "tax expenditures."
Tax expenditures are federal tax provisions that cost the U.S. Treasury tax revenue by cutting the amount of taxes owed by various taxpayers or leading the government to pay cash to some taxpayers.
The analysts divided tax expenditure provisions into four categories:
- Provisions that definitely should be kept roughly as is
- Provisions that should be kept but reformed
- Provisions that definitely should be repealed
- Provisions that should either be repealed or reformed
The analysts put the exclusion for employer contributions for medical insurance premiums in the repeal-or-reform category.
"As the largest tax expenditure, this costs $6.1 trillion over 10 years," the analysts wrote in their new commentary. "Full repeal would require replacing this provision with an alternative policy option."
Congress could soften the elimination of full repeal by raising the contribution limits for health savings accounts, the analysts said.
Congress could also cap the exclusion at the 50th percentile of premiums, and that option could raise about $1.2 trillion in extra tax revenue over 10 years, the analysts predicted.
The analysts also put repealing the deduction for charitable contributions in the reform-or-repeal category. They put the deduction for medical expenses in the repeal category.
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