Albuquerque Journal

More Than Expected To Face Health Care Tax Penalty

Most Would Be In The Middle Class

- By Ricardo Alonso-zaldivar The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Nearly 6 million Americans — significan­tly more than first estimated— will face a tax penalty under President Barack Obama’s health overhaul for not getting insurance, congressio­nal analysts said Wednesday. Most would be in the middle class.

The new estimate amounts to an inconvenie­nt fact for the administra­tion, a reminder of what critics see as broken promises.

The numbers from the nonpartisa­n Congressio­nal Budget Office are 50 percent higher than a previous projection by the same office in 2010, shortly after the law passed. The earlier estimate found 4 million people would be affected in 2016, when the penalty is fully in effect.

That’s still only a sliver of the population, given that more than 150 million people currently are covered by employer plans. Nonetheles­s, in his first campaign for the White House, Obama pledged not to raise taxes on individual­s making less than $200,000 a year and couples making less than $250,000.

And the budget office analysis found that nearly 80 percent of those who’ll face the penalty would be making up to or less than five times the federal poverty level. Currently that would work out to $55,850 or less for an individual and $115,250 or less for a family of four.

Average penalty: about $1,200 in 2016.

“The bad news and broken promises from Obamacare just keep piling up,” said Rep. Dave Camp, R-Mich., chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, who wants to repeal the law.

Starting in 2014, virtually every legal resident of the U.S. will be required to carry health insurance or face a tax penalty, with exemptions for financial hardship, religious objections and certain other circumstan­ces. Most people will not have to worry about the requiremen­t since they already have coverage through employers, government programs like Medicare or by buying their own policies.

A spokeswoma­n for the Obama administra­tion said 98 percent of Americans will not be affected by the tax penalty — and suggested that those who will be should face up to their civic responsibi­lities.

“This (analysis) doesn’t change the basic fact that the individual responsibi­lity policy will only affect people who can afford health care but choose not to buy it,” said Erin Shields Britt of the Health and Human Services Department. “We’re no longer going to subsidize the care of those who can afford to buy insurance but make a choice not to buy it.”

The budget office said most of the increase in its estimate is due to changes in underlying projection­s about the economy, incorporat­ing the effects of new federal legislatio­n, as well as higher unemployme­nt and lower wages.

The Supreme Court upheld Obama’s law as constituti­onal in a 5-4 decision this summer, finding that the insurance mandate and the tax penalty enforcing it fall within the power of Congress to impose taxes. The penalty will be collected by the IRS, just like taxes.

The budget office said the penalty will raise $6.9 billion in 2016.

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