|
bush's health insurance proposal is a spoonful of sugar to make the medicine go down - except bush is not Mary Poppins and this isn't a disney movie
We have millions of WORKING people who do not have access to health insurance. The 2 most common reasons for no health insurance is:
1. Employer doesn't provide health insurance benefits 2. Employee can't afford to buy insurance on his/her own.
Employee contributions to company provided health insurance are currently sheltered from taxes. This means your contribution is deducted from your Gross Pay, and then your are taxed on the balance.
bush's proposal is to no longer shelter the contribution up front, but rather give you a "deduction" at the back end. For most of us it won't make much of a difference, we probably wouldn't even notice the switch.
So how does this effect people with NO INSURANCE? It doesn't effect them at all, it doesn't give them health insurance, it doesn't encourage employers to provide a health insurance benefit, and it doesn't provide money UP FRONT to pay for health insurance.
A HMO type plan averages $3,400 - $4,000 for SINGLE coverage ($280-$330 a month)- these numbers are based on group rates. There are very few companies that will provide individual coverage, and those policies are either very expensive or carry such high deductables to make them next to useless.
A person working at $5.15/hr (40hrs wk) grosses $206/week or $824 a month). How can they afford $280-$333 a month and still pay their regular bills and buy food? They can't, and a tax deduction at the end of the year doesn't pay the insurance premium this month.
What it comes down to is if you can't afford to "buy" the product in the first place, then a deduction at the end of the year doesn't help you today.
|