Xequecal wrote:
I've read that the Senate "fixes" bill substantially increases the threshold for when something qualifies as a "Cadillac plan."
I don't know what the House was thinking setting the Cadillac plan limit at $8,500 for an individual unless they were straight-up trying to just implement a huge stealth tax on corporations or run the insurance industry out of business.
You've got the order backwards, Xeq. The original Senate bill had the Cadillac tax kicking in at $8500 for individuals, and the House reconciliation package raised that to $10,200. It's just in the news now because Senate Republicans used that change as part of their procedural maneuver to force a second vote in the House.
On the substantive point, this isn't a stealth tax on corporations or intended to drive the insurance industry out of business. Rather, it's intended to shift the market away from employer-based insurance to privately-purchased insurance by gradually reducing the tax benefit employer-based plans currently get. It just does it gradually by starting with the highest cost plans and, over time, applying to more and more plans as inflation causes regular plans to cross the threshold.
That's actually a policy goal that both liberals and conservatives agree on. Hell, in 2008, McCain campaigned on completely eliminating the tax-free status of
all employer-based insurance immediately! Obama argued that such a rapid shift would be too much of a shock, and hence his reform plan does it gradually. At the end of the day, though, this is just closing a tax loophole that everyone agrees distorts the insurance market and harms the economy.