http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/politics/jan-june10/cadillac_01-11.htmlsnip>>>
"...GWEN IFILL: House leaders support a plan to raise taxes on families earning a million dollars or more and individuals who earn $500,000 or more.
For more on the pros and the cons of the so-called Cadillac tax, we turn to Jonathan Gruber, a health economist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology -- he is also a paid consultant to the Obama administration -- and Josh Bivens, an economist at the Economic Policy Institute, a think tank that receives some money from labor groups.
Welcome to you both.
Jonathan Gruber, why is this a good idea?
JONATHAN GRUBER: Well, thanks for having me on, Gwen.
I think it's a good idea because we need to look at what happens currently when people make the decision between getting paid in wages or health insurance. If MIT offers to give me a $1,000 raise, I'm only going to take home about $600, because I will get taxed at 40 percent on that raise. If MIT says, here's $1,000 extra fringe benefit in your health insurance, I get to keep the whole $1,000, because I'm not taxed on that.
That tax subsidy, employer-sponsored insurance, as it's called, costs our nation about $250 billion a year and leads, by many economists in the Congressional Budget Office's estimates, to excessive health insurance coverage and rising health care costs.
What this bill would do is slightly scale back that existing tax bias by taxing the most expensive plans on the amount they spend above a certain threshold, and basically scaling back the giveaway we now have to the most expensive health insurance plans.
JONATHAN GRUBER: ... scale-back.
GWEN IFILL: Let me just get -- get -- let Josh Bivens in here now, because he says it's a giveaway to the existing health insurance plans. What do you say?
JOSH BIVENS, Economic Policy Institute: I don't know if I would call it a giveaway. I do think it's not a great idea.
I mean, I think one problem is, it's often talked -- it's called a Cadillac tax. And the idea is that we're taxing somehow lavish plans that provide generous coverage. It's not very well targeted at all. I would be in favor of some sort of well-targeted way to do this, but this is a very poorly targeted policy proposal.
GWEN IFILL: You're saying the people who benefit from it are people who are just middle-class folks?
JOSH BIVENS: Well, actually, I would say there are reasons why health insurance plans are expensive, and generosity is not necessarily one of them. We have a very dysfunctional health insurance market, and high-cost plans do not equal high-value plans.
In fact, research says that, of the entire spread of health insurance premiums, their cost, only about 4 percent can -- of that can be accounted for by generosity of plan. You're likely to have an expensive plan if you work for a small firm, if you work for a firm with an aging work force. It really is not about Cadillac plans or lavish benefits. It's just people who happen to work for -- in those kinds of workplaces.
So, I think it's very poorly targeted in that regard..."