The Hill: Economists rush to defense of Cadillac tax
The Hill: Economists rush to defense of Cadillac tax
Dozens of economists and health experts from both sides of the aisle are coming to the defense of ObamaCares embattled Cadillac tax.
The 101 experts argue, in a letter distributed by the liberal Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, that the tax on high-cost health plans will slow the rise of healthcare costs, because employers dont have enough incentive now to limit the sort of plans they offer.
The letter comes after Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton endorsed scrapping the Cadillac tax, a position that is popular among organized labor. Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), another Democratic candidate, also opposes the tax, and Republicans have long sought to repeal it.
The letters signers noted that they hold widely varying views on other provisions of the Affordable Care Act, and we recognize that measures other than the Cadillac tax could have been used to restrict the open-ended health insurance tax break.
But, we unite in urging Congress to take no action to weaken, delay, or reduce the Cadillac tax until and unless it enacts an alternative tax change that would more effectively curtail cost growth, they added.
Clinton, Sanders and other opponents of the Cadillac tax from the left have made it clear that they would find ways to plug the deficit hole estimated to be $91 billion over a decade that would come from repealing the tax. Republicans arent as worried about finding offsets; they've long been interested in dismantling the Affordable Care Act entirely.
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