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Washington, DC - In tonight's State of the Union address, President Bush is expected to call for a health insurance tax hike on middle class Americans - a proposal that shows he is not serious about fixing America's broken health care system. In the same year the President will submit a budget making his tax cuts permanent -tax cuts that went overwhelmingly to the richest Americans- he is proposing to shift more of the cost of health care onto working Americans. Additionally, the President's proposal actually could impose a new tax on working Americans if they already have a good health care plan, while doing nothing to hold down skyrocketing health care costs.
Democrats support measures to help increase the number of people with health insurance, not shifting the burden to hard working Americans already struggling to make ends meet.
"This proposal shows that President Bush is not serious about fixing the nation's health care system," said Democratic National Committee Chairman Howard Dean. "The Bush Administration has ignored the problem for six years, costs and the number of uninsured continue to skyrocket, yet the President's solution is to raise taxes on working families? Like so much of what the President proposes, this latest scheme fails to address the problem and actually makes health care less affordable for many Americans, while doing nothing to help insure those who can not afford it. Democrats remain committed to finding solutions to these challenges, not creating new ones."
Under President Bush's failed leadership, the nation's health insurance crisis has worsened:
* While the United States continues to spend more than any other country on health care, nearly 47 million Americans remain uninsured. Since President Bush took office, the number of uninsured Americans has grown by nearly 6 million.
* Health care costs are increasing faster than wages. Over three million fewer workers received employer-based coverage in 2005 than in 2000 and the cost of a health premium for an average family is $11,480- roughly equal to the salary of a full-time, minimum-wage worker.
* The United States spends more on health care per person than any other country, including countries that provide health care coverage to its entire citizenry. But the quality of our care continues to lag.
Americans Are Already Paying a Higher Share of Employer Provided Health Coverage:
* On average, the amount workers pay toward premiums has risen 84% since 2000, while wages are up 20% and inflation 18%.
* Employees' contribution to average annual premiums for family coverage has escalated to $2,973, an increase of 80 percent since 2000, when the employees' share was $1,656.
* Employees' contribution to the average annual premium for single coverage has escalated to $627, an increase of 87 percent since 2000, when the employees' share was $336.
The president's plan to expand health savings accounts (HSAs) will not solve the problem.
* Health savings accounts disproportionately benefit the wealthiest Americans, some of whom use them as tax shelters. The Government Accountability Office (GAO) found "that the average income of HSA users was $133,000 in 2004, compared to $51,000 for all non-elderly tax filers." Most low-income individuals don't have a high enough tax liability to see a significant benefit from tax deductions associated with HSAs and multiple studies have shown that HSAs are actually likely to increase the number of uninsured and increase health care costs.
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Paid for and authorized by the Democratic National Committee, www.democrats.org. This communication is not authorized by any candidate or candidate's committee.
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