OldRegular
Well-Known Member
President Bush's Plan for Health Care Reform
How George W. Bush Would Have Replaced Obamacare
In January of 2007, George W. Bush was entering the final stretch of his two-term presidency. Bush, however, chose not to ride off simply into the sunset. Instead, he put forth a comprehensive plan to reform the private health insurance market. It’s long-forgotten now, because Democrats had just regained control of Congress, and these newly-empowered legislators pronounced the Bush plan “dead on arrival.” In many ways, though, the Bush proposal was impressive and credible. It would have expanded coverage while reducing the deficit. Should it serve as the starting point for replacing Obamacare?
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Bush’s proposal sought to eliminate the unlimited tax break for employer-sponsored insurance, replacing it with a standard deduction for everyone. Under the plan, anyone—employed or not—who bought at least catastrophic insurance would not pay income or payroll taxes on the first $7,500 of their income, or the first $15,000 for a family plan.
It’s an idea with a long history in Republican policy circles. In the early 1980s, President Reagan proposed capping the employer-sponsored insurance deduction, in order to reduce the deficit, but it went nowhere in Congress, because Republicans saw it as a tax increase, and labor unions saw it as a threat to their generous benefit packages. In 1992, George H.W. Bush also sought to cap the exclusion and use the savings to fund tax-credit subsidies for the uninsured, but the elder Bush had recently violated his “no new taxes” pledge, and House Republicans were in no mood to raise taxes again.
http://www.forbes.com/sites/theapot...-george-w-bush-would-have-replaced-obamacare/