Comprehensive List of All Tax Hikes in House Government Health Bill
10/30/09
Employer Mandate Excise Tax (Page 275): If an employer does not pay 72.5
percent of a single employee’s health premium (65 percent of a family
employee), the employer must pay an excise tax equal to 8 percent of average
wages. Small employers (measured by payroll size) have smaller payroll tax
rates of 0 percent (<$500,000), 2 percent ($500,000-$585,000), 4 percent
($585,000-$670,000), and 6 percent ($670,000-$750,000).
Individual Mandate Surtax (Page 296): If an individual fails to obtain
qualifying coverage, he must pay an income surtax equal to the lesser of 2.5
percent of modified adjusted gross income (MAGI) or the average premium.
MAGI adds back in the foreign earned income exclusion and municipal bond
interest.
Medicine Cabinet Tax (Page 324): Non-prescription medications would no
longer be able to be purchased from health savings accounts (HSAs), flexible
spending accounts (FSAs), or health reimbursement arrangements (HRAs).
Insulin excepted.
Cap on FSAs (Page 325): FSAs would face an annual cap of $2500 (currently
uncapped).
Increased Additional Tax on Non-Qualified HSA Distributions (Page 326):
Non-qualified distributions from HSAs would face an additional tax of 20
percent (current law is 10 percent). This disadvantages HSAs relative to
other tax-free accounts (e.g. IRAs, 401(k)s, 529 plans, etc.)
Denial of Tax Deduction for Employer Health Plans Coordinating with Medicare
Part D (Page 327): This would further erode private sector participation in
delivery of Medicare services.
Surtax on Individuals and Small Businesses (Page 336): Imposes an income
surtax of 5.4 percent on MAGI over $500,000 ($1 million married filing
jointly). MAGI adds back in the itemized deduction for margin loan interest.
This would raise the top marginal tax rate in 2011 from 39.6 percent under
current law to 45 percent—a new effective top rate.
Excise Tax on Medical Devices (Page 339): Imposes a new excise tax on
medical device manufacturers equal to 2.5 percent of the wholesale price. It
excludes retail sales and unspecified medical devices sold to the general
public.
Corporate 1099-MISC Information Reporting (Page 344): Requires that
1099-MISC forms be issued to corporations as well as persons for trade or
business payments. Current law limits to just persons for small business
compliance complexity reasons. Also expands reporting to exchanges of
property.
Delay in Worldwide Allocation of Interest (Page 345): Delays for nine years
the worldwide allocation of interest, a corporate tax relief provision from
the American Jobs Creation Act
Limitation on Tax Treaty Benefits for Certain Payments (Page 346): Increases
taxes on U.S. employers with overseas operations looking to avoid double
taxation of earnings.
Codification of the “Economic Substance Doctrine” (Page 349): Empowers the
IRS to disallow a perfectly legal tax deduction or other tax relief merely
because the IRS deems that the motive of the taxpayer was not primarily
business-related.
Application of “More Likely Than Not” Rule (Page 357): Publicly-traded
partnerships and corporations with annual gross receipts in excess of $100
million have raised standards on penalties. If there is a tax underpayment
by these taxpayers, they must be able to prove that the estimated tax paid
would have more likely than not been sufficient to cover final tax
liability.
From Americans for Tax Reform
For more information, contact ATR Tax Policy Director Ryan Ellis at
rellis@atr.org