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Just When You Thought It
Was Safe To Go Back In The Water:
Bush Health Care Plan Another Killer Shark to the Working Class
By Region 8 Webmaster John Davis
02/19/2007
When the producers of the successful
“Jaws” motion picture planned a sequel to the picture,
a plan for marketing the new film was developed. To remind the viewers
of the first picture of the danger, they used the slogan “just
when you thought it was safe to go back in the water” here
comes the shark again.
The same could be said of President “W”, just when we
thought it was safe for the working class to go back into the water,
along comes the shark again. After his narrow win in 2004, Bush
proclaimed his election “a mandate by the people for his policies.”
However, when his party was soundly defeated in the midterm elections
last year, a true mandate was declared by the American people that
they had enough of George Bush and his agenda for the rich.
While a smart man would have scaled back on his attack on America’s
working families, the President forged ahead in his “damn
the torpedoes” style and rolled out a plan to go after working
family’s health care benefits in his State of the Union address.
In his plan, Bush stated he wanted to “assist families without
employer provided health care coverage by issuing tax breaks to
those who purchase their own insurance.” He feels the problem
is that many Americans have “to much insurance” so he
wants to tax what he calls “gold plated plans.” This
sounds good – until you look at the problems with the plan.
Bush intends of providing a deduction of $7,500 for an individual
and $15,000 for a family who purchases their own health care insurance.
This plan would encourage individuals to purchase lesser coverage
plans to increase their benefit from the tax deduction. The result
will be more people “underinsured” and carrying a great
risk of health care debt. (Bush’s overhaul of the bankruptcy
law in 2005 now prevents individuals from filing bankruptcy due
to health care bills.) However, the pitfalls of the plan do not
end there.
Fiction: The plan would improve
the lives of the middle class by paving a way for the uninsured
to access health care coverage.
Fact: Bush’s plan is in two parts, with the
first being the tax credit for those purchasing health care coverage
and the second part lifting the tax exemption for employer provided
health care. So, anyone who receives health care benefits that are
rated above $15,000 a year would now find themselves taxed on those
health care benefits. The latest census records show that 175 million
Americans obtain health care benefits from their employer and 27
million Americans purchase health care outside the workplace. Then
of course there are 48 million Americans with no health care. The
Bush plan would result in those having comprehensive plans (such
as union members) seeing their tax burden increased because of the
value placed on their benefit plans.
Fiction: Only the rich will see
this taxation of their health care benefits because only they have
these expensive plans.
Fact: Studies show the wealthy who buy their own
insurance tend to purchase plans with higher co-pays and lower plan
prices. The wealthy can afford these higher deductibles and tend
to be healthier than lower income people based on their health maintenance
and better diets. The 27 million who would see the benefit from
this plan would include a large portion of the wealthy who buy their
own health care. So if they wealthy do not have what Bush calls
“gold plated” health care plans, who does? The middle
class with comprehensive health care plans that include medical,
dental and prescription drug coverage. You know – people like
YOU!
Let’s use Delphi employees for an example. CEO big mouth Steve
Miller raved everywhere about paying his first tier employees $65
an hour. Any Delphi employee knows their wages were no where close
to this. So who did he get that figure? The average Delphi first
tier employee makes about $27 an hour. So-
$65 per hour (including all benefits)
-$27 per hour (actual wages)
= $38 per hour (for benefits)
$38 an hour
X 1800 hours a year
= $68,400 for benefits
- $15,000 allowance for benefits *
= $53,400 that will be eligible for federal tax.
*(this is deduction is for those with a family, a single individual
would only get a $7,500 tax credit)
Most Delphi tier one employees fell within the 28% federal tax bracket
which equates to $14,952 a year in federal taxes. How would you
like to pay an additional $14,952 in federal tax just for having
decent health care benefits? Delphi’s second tier employees
have a benefit package estimated at about $28 an hour. Most second
tier employees will fall within the 25% tax bracket if filling jointly
with a spouse and they work much overtime. After their $15,000 credit
for a family, they would still owe another $8,850 in federal tax
on their health care benefits.
Fiction: The President’s
plan would allow more Americans to have health care benefits.
Fact: Even the President’s own forecast show
they plan would only make health care affordable for 6% (or about
3 million) of the 48 million Americans who are currently uninsured.
Actual numbers are probably much lower than this. What the plan
would do is encourage mid and small level employers who currently
offer basic health care coverage to their employees to drop this
coverage justifying it by stating their employees could buy their
own coverage by utilizing the tax break. This would mean the employees
who receive more cost efficient health care coverage provided by
employer pools would see less coverage with higher cost by utilizing
more expensive private plans. Some experts say the plan could jeopardize
employer provided health care for 147 million of those 157 million
with this type of coverage.
So if the President’s plan will result in
more Americans losing health care coverage and those who don’t
find themselves paying thousands in federal taxes for them, who
benefits from the proposal? The wealthy that’s who. Essentially
all this plan does is provide another tax break to the wealthy and
affluent that have benefited from Bush’s past tax programs.
America faces a serious health care challenge and the only solution
this President can offer is to “level the playing field”
by placing more Americans at risk by eliminating their health care
coverage or shifting it to a “market based system” such
as he did with the Medicare Prescription Drug plan. By moving coverage
from the federal government to the private sector, cost went up
while service declined. Profit based health care plans only benefit
the insurance companies, not the insured.
The chance of this terrible plan being passed into law is unlikely
in a Democratic controlled Congress, but we can’t take that
for granted. Every American that has employer provided health care
must keep the pressure on their elected representatives to oppose
any system that taxes the working class’s health care benefits,
while urging Washington to find affordable ways to offer health
care to those without it, with a single payer national health care
system being the answer. Until this issue is settled, it isn’t
safe to go back into the water the working class swims in. Remember,
the shark still circles at the White House.
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