All he knows is tax, regulate and dictate, the commie bastard! m/r
David Catron 1-28-18
The GOP disarms three more financial time bombs about to blow up your personal budget.
Lost in all the sound and fury that accompanied the
recent shutdown of the federal government was some good news for
Americans facing ever increasing health care costs. Part of the price
paid by the Democrats to get out of the hole they dug for themselves
when they forced the shutdown was the suspension of three onerous
Obamacare taxes — the medical device tax, the tax on premium (Cadillac)
health plans, and the health insurance (HIT) tax. All three were wildly
unpopular with the voters, due to go into effect imminently, and would
have made medical care even more expensive.
The 2.3 percent tax on
medical devices, which went into effect on January 1, has long been
billed by Obamacare advocates as a corporate tax. Like all taxes levied
on corporations, however, it would have inevitably been passed on to the
customer. And the customers affected by this particular excise tax are
Americans who must have crucial medical devices such as pacemakers and
artificial joints. Also impacted are the hospitals to which patients go
to receive advanced tests involving MRIs, CT scans, ultrasounds, and X-rays. The cost of these tests would inevitably be increased by this tax.
Moreover,
the medical device tax is a natural born job killer. This is not a
matter of idle speculation. This excise tax has already been implemented
and suspended once. It originally went into effect January 1, 2013,
pursuant to the provisions of the “Affordable Care Act,” and bedeviled
the medical device industry until Congress decided to suspend it at the
end of 2015. During the two years the tax remained in effect, the
manufacturers were frequently forced to choose between R & D and
eliminating jobs. As Stephen L. Ferguson, the chairman of Cook Medical,
wrote at the time:
For
two years this tax has sapped value-added jobs and vitality from mature
firms and start-ups alike, as it is applied whether a company has
profits or not. Every 20 minutes, the equivalent of a $68,000-a-year job
disappears from the balance sheet of a company in this sector. That’s
the toll of a tax that claims $1.8 billion a year from our nation’s most
innovative industry — the most recent estimate from the IRS.
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