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What ObamaCare Means for Your Taxes


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2012 Jun 29, 2:55am   23,456 views  57 comments

by zzyzzx   ➕follow (9)   💰tip   ignore  

http://finance.yahoo.com/news/what-obamacare-means-for-your-taxes.html

But that's not all. Also starting in 2013, all or part of the net investment income, including long-term capital gains and dividends, collected by higher-income folks can get socked with an additional 3.8% "Medicare contribution tax." Therefore, the maximum federal rate on long-term gains for 2013 and beyond will actually be 23.8% (versus the current 15%) and the maximum rate on dividends will be a whopping 43.4% (versus the current 15%). Yikes!

Article fails to mention the other 18 new taxes from Obamacare.

#politics

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1   edvard2   2012 Jun 29, 2:56am  

Oh no! Taxes!

2   TMAC54   2012 Jun 29, 4:36am  

My Father, An Engineer, Left Europe in 1952, due to the 75% income tax rate caused by "SOCIALIZED MEDICINE" ! Get ready America. History does repeat itself due to our emotional decision making habit.

Because it is free, People will overwhelm any services available.

Do you really believe you get a free taxi ride on New years eve.

3   freak80   2012 Jun 29, 4:44am  

Eh, it's pretty corrupt and expensive right now. Right now, health care is a "hidden tax" taken out of your paycheck for your company's health insurance benefits, which are not cheap. Everyone bitches about teacher's unions and firefighter unions, but no one bitches about the AMA union. And it IS a union, whether we want to admit it or not.

The whole ObamaCare thing is kind of anti-climactic at this point.

I've pretty much learned by now that almost everything in life is a racket at some level or another.

Isn't any human activity organized at a scale higher tribal-level a racket?

4   PockyClipsNow   2012 Jun 29, 4:53am  

Since the feds only take in 50% of what they spend (rest is printed via the fed reserve buying new tbonds with newly printed $) I propose we abolish all forms of taxation.

Then they can simply print 100% of what they need and leave us alone. Imagine all the saved trees and carbon emissions that would result from no tax paperwork of any kind (thus saving the planet!!!!!!!)

5   freak80   2012 Jun 29, 4:57am  

PockyClipsNow says

Then they can simply print 100% of what they need and leave us alone. Imagine all the saved trees and carbon emissions that would result from no tax paperwork of any kind (thus saving the planet!!!!!!!)

Hey as long as the Chi-coms keep buying up our paper, why not? They'll probably collapse before we do anyway.

6   EBGuy   2012 Jun 29, 5:17am  

Taxmaggedon has little to do with ObamaCare (though, I won't deny there ARE taxes in the legislation). The big 2013 rate hikes are due to the expiration of the Bush cuts. Its going to be a crazy November and December in Washington once the election is over.

7   FortWayne   2012 Jun 29, 6:43am  

wthrfrk80 says

Eh, it's pretty corrupt and expensive right now. Right now, health care is a "hidden tax" taken out of your paycheck for your company's health insurance benefits, which are not cheap.

It because this way because the unions which run this country felt that for generations employer must provide health insurance, and that's how the system adjusted.

8   PockyClipsNow   2012 Jun 29, 6:44am  

Seriously its game over when the feds are printing 50% of the budget. How can we grow out of that hole when the deficit is still going up over 1T per year.

It could be the USA is now a failed state - BUT - no one will realize it until a drastic and fast currency collapse happens like the CCCP collapse - they were gone within 2-3 years! Shit there was even a movie made about the CCCP invading the US and by the time the movie came out - they had ceased to exist. funny huh. Shit happens fast when money is funny.

Gold would be an excellent hedge BUT if you are gonna own over 100k in gold, get ready for the dudes who sold it to you to follow you around and steal it or do home invasion robbery.

So what to invest in? I suppose rental homes.

9   bob2356   2012 Jun 29, 7:10am  

TMAC54 says

My Father, An Engineer, Left Europe in 1952, due to the 75% income tax rate caused by "SOCIALIZED MEDICINE" ! Get ready America. History does repeat itself due to our emotional decision making habit.

You father must have been one hell of an engineer to make enough money to be in the 75% income tax bracket in 1952. Where in Europe was this by the way?

10   bob2356   2012 Jun 29, 7:21am  

FortWayne says

It because this way because the unions which run this country felt that for generations employer must provide health insurance, and that's how the system adjusted.

Private employer union membership is something like 7%. Public is 30%. I can certainly see how they run the country. How is it that so many countries with much stronger unions never developed employer health care? The reason private employer health care plans proliferated was because in 1954 they became exempt from taxes. Public plans followed later as a way to avoid direct increases in public salaries. Follow the money.

11   Nobody   2012 Jun 29, 7:28am  

Good. Tax the rich.

12   FortWayne   2012 Jun 29, 7:39am  

bob2356 says

Private employer union membership is something like 7%. Public is 30%. I can certainly see how they run the country. How is it that so many countries with much stronger unions never developed employer health care? The reason private employer health care plans proliferated was because in 1954 they became exempt from taxes. Public plans followed later as a way to avoid direct increases in public salaries. Follow the money.

That's how it started, mentality never changed.

13   freak80   2012 Jun 29, 11:33am  

PockyClipsNow says

Gold would be an excellent hedge BUT if you are gonna own over 100k in gold, get ready for the dudes who sold it to you to follow you around and steal it or do home invasion robbery.

So what to invest in?

Ammo.

14   marcus   2012 Jun 29, 2:27pm  

TMAC54 says

Because it is free, People will overwhelm any services available.

This is a stupid fear.

I've had health insurance for years, and I even have a cronic health issue. And yet I average less than one visit a year to the doctor.

But I do try to practice prevention strategies. Part of my rationale for not going to the doctor more is they are busy bodies, and will likely want to do surgery and constant tests, while I've managed my situation for decades primarily with alternative practices and prevention.

Don't get me wrong, I will know when I need to be more proactive, and having the ability to go to the doctor if I need to is nice. But just because going to the doctor is paid for (for me - minus small copay) doesn't mean I go all the time.

Btw, the copay can be tweaked and probably needs to be high enough to keep neurotic hypochondriacs from wasting doctor's (or nurse practitioners) time. Problem solved (nonexistent problem that is).

The homeless or super poor person who is on medicaid or other free health care, is usually going to be even less likely to go to the doctor frequently than I am, unless they really need the care - in which case they will sometimes be preventing MUCH more expensive and resource intensive care that results from neglecting their health concerns.

15   Homeboy   2012 Jun 29, 2:43pm  

Oh noes! Rich people will have to pay slightly more taxes?

Who cares? Fuck 'em.

16   TMAC54   2012 Jun 29, 3:16pm  

bob2356 says

You father must have been one hell of an engineer to make enough money to be in the 75% income tax bracket in 1952. Where in Europe was this by the way?

Glasgow.
Bought his Sister who still lives in England a T.V., but had to pay the additional "television tax" of a couple hundred dollars.
Maybe you have not heard all the words, "Be thankfull I don't take it all"
http://www.youtube.com/embed/Oyu5sFzWLk8

marcus says

This is a stupid fear.

Do you have first hand experience with this type of policy ?

I remember My Mother's story (also from Scotland) about school aged children. Drop their prescription glasses, step on and break them, and say, "Oh well, They are FREE".

http://frontpagemag.com/2012/02/20/why-the-uk-is-ditching-socialized-medicine/
As other countries realize socialized care is a failure, Our leaders Impute it.


http://americanvision.org/2399/obama-to-students-dont-call-our-socialism-socialism/#.T-6LeHCvU3Z

17   marcus   2012 Jun 29, 4:01pm  

TMAC54 says

Do you have first hand experience with this type of policy ?

Don't respond to any of my reasoning. I know you. You didn't even read it.

For one thing, of course the totally socialized systems have their issues and are always going to be trying to improve. The good news for them, I would think is that since they currently spend less than half what we do per capita on health care, they have quite a bit of room to spend money carefully on improvements, or even moving in the direction of something slightly more hybrid.

Speaking of hybrid, why compare Obamacare, which isn't really even a hybrid plan, to a truly socialized health care system such as what they have in the UK ?

A hybrid approach that I would like to see, would be medicare for all, with supplemental health insurance policies. Because of our extremist right wing government, it might take us a few decades to finally get close to our inevitable health care system which will probably be something like that, if not fully nationalized.

"ObamaCare" is a very conservative plan, in the sense that it works so hard to preserve the health insurance industry's role. Why do all the idiots need to reminded over and over again that this was a republican policy..

The funniest thing is that republicans say they'll "repeal and redo."

And they promise to preserve coverage of preexisting conditions, but without a mandate. Do any of you dimbulbs even comprehend how impossible that is ? It's worse than just not paying for it. The concept makes no sense without everyone covered.

18   Danaseb   2012 Jun 29, 10:39pm  

hey, considering every definition of morality considers it more important to cure sick people than shoot people; did any of you right wingers ever consider the military a target for this fat ass government problem? I'm guessing no.

19   TMAC54   2012 Jun 30, 12:04am  

marcus says

TMAC54 says

Do you have first hand experience with this type of policy ?

Don't respond to any of my reasoning.

I would be defensive too. Utopia is a lovely fantasy, but is fraught with misunderstanding. Like we are discovering in our cosmos, there are unlimited new elements and all types of people to deal with. Our present welfare system is burdened with fraud & corruption.
Will Obamacare be any different ?

20   bob2356   2012 Jun 30, 3:42am  

TMAC54 says

bob2356 says

You father must have been one hell of an engineer to make enough money to be in the 75% income tax bracket in 1952. Where in Europe was this by the way?

Glasgow.

Wow, he must have been a some type of super engineer. I looked up the UK tax rates for 1950, the 75% rate started at 120,000 pounds. Only 2.1% of the UK population paid over the basic 36% rate in 1950. How much over 120,000 pounds was he making that the 75% rate forced him to move to America? Was he able to make that kind of money as an engineer after moving to America in 1952?

21   rdm   2012 Jun 30, 4:17am  

bob2356 says

Only 2.1% of the UK population paid over the basic 36% rate in 1950. How much over 120,000 pounds was he making that the 75% rate forced him to move to America? Was he able to make that kind of money as an engineer after moving to America in 1952?

This is the same kind of "thinking" that gets working folks irate over the estate tax (cleverly renamed death tax). Very few of the people opposed to the estate tax actually know that there is a huge exemption, I think it currently 5 million valuation to an estate before any taxes are paid. Unless they hit the mega millions lottery most can rest assured that when they die their 3/2 house in the burbs is safe from Uncle Sam.

22   bob2356   2012 Jun 30, 4:34am  

rdm says

bob2356 says

Only 2.1% of the UK population paid over the basic 36% rate in 1950. How much over 120,000 pounds was he making that the 75% rate forced him to move to America? Was he able to make that kind of money as an engineer after moving to America in 1952?

This is the same kind of "thinking" that gets working folks irate over the estate tax (cleverly renamed death tax). Very few of the people opposed to the estate tax actually know that there is a huge exemption, I think it currently 5 million valuation to an estate before any taxes are paid. Unless they hit the mega millions lottery most can rest assured that when they die their 3/2 house in the burbs is safe from Uncle Sam.

So true, there is projected to be a whopping 3,300 people out of 330 million paying estate tax this year. If the Bush tax cuts expire as scheduled and estate tax goes back to 1 million exemption in 2013 there would be a projected 52,000 people paying estate tax out of 330 million. That certainly represents a huge percentage of the population affected by the death tax. Amazing the non issues that can be drummed up to scare the 99% into insisting on protecting the wealth of the 1%.

23   drew_eckhardt   2012 Jun 30, 4:48am  

bob2356 says

The reason private employer health care plans proliferated was because in 1954 they became exempt from taxes. Public plans followed later as a way to avoid direct increases in public salaries. Follow the money.

You're a decade late.

As world war 2 began the need for more labor to build war machines combined with fewer men available since they were off fighting caused significant inflation as wages increased and the price of goods followed- 15% from January 1, 1941 to May 1, 1942.

To put a stop to that the government froze wages in 1942.

Benefits weren't considered wages, so companies attracted more workers through things like health insurance in lieu of more cash.

In 1943 the IRS ruled that these benefits were not taxable.

24   marcus   2012 Jun 30, 5:12am  

TMAC54 says

Will Obamacare be any different ?

Actually the rationing part will not be any different. Rationing is done all the time now, right out in the open, and it's understandable. Medicare is already involved with care for the elderly, the age where these issues or risks exist, and there is a degree of transparency in the rationing.

If someone is 84 and weak after dealing with a series of debilitating problems, for years, do you do a $700K procedure (and follow up care) that they have a 37% chance of living through, and even if they do make it through only about a 20% chance of living more than one additional year (in discomfort and disabled), because of all of the other problems the person has ?

You do know those decisions are made all the time now right ? The doctor doesn't even try to proceed with this. In many cases, these decisions don't even reach the desk of an insurance person who will say no, because the decision isn't only about money.

25   drew_eckhardt   2012 Jun 30, 5:48am  

marcus says

Actually the rationing part will not be any different. Rationing is done all the time now, right out in the open, and it's understandable.

Medicare is already involved to a degree with care for the elderly, the age where these issues or risks exist, and there is a degree of transparency in the rationing.

The rationing will be plenty different for people too young for Medicare and not poor enough for Medicaid.

Today the insurance companies make more money by reducing their loss ratios, with the best companies spending only 60% of premiums on medical care. One $700K procedure is $700K less profit and they'd rather avoid it

As of 2014 they must spend at least 80% of premiums on medical care and give back any excess. A $700K procedure will allow them to collect or retain $875K in premiums of which they keep $175K for overhead and profits. They'll gladly allow the surgery, especially if it may lead to another $700K procedure with $175K for their cut.

26   marcus   2012 Jun 30, 7:48am  

drew_eckhardt says

They'll gladly allow the surgery, especially if it may lead to another $700K procedure with $175K for their cut.

Interesting theory, but you're missing a few things. It won't be viewed this way.

Remember, part of the argument for keeping insurance companies in the process is free markets and competition. Hopefully republican's big idea of allowing competition across state lines will be added. There also will be a public option.

THey have an incentive to keep membership prices to their plans down.
Current plans, such as those at large corporations, which are basically pooling of health care costs shared across a large group, won't change.

Health care is already too expensive, and for any insurance or group plan, they don't need to try to get the total amount they pay to providers to be high. It will be anyway. Their focus will on on efficient administration. That's where their profits have (in the past) and will come from. The health plans that can do this most efficiently will have the best rates and the most members (were talking entire corporations that will choose them!)

I can see that there will be all kinds of complexity, and probably ways that Obama Care gets "gamed"and then necessary tweaks down the road. But the exciting thing is that health care in the US is evolving.

It seems to me that the least the critics can do is try to understand it, before assuming it's bad.

27   HEY YOU   2012 Jun 30, 8:31am  

I'll say it again. Anyone benefiting from any govt. program funded by tax dollars is a SOCIALIST. How you like it,Neo-Con Republican
Teabagger Libertarian Freeloaders. I guess the N-CRTLF will have to pay the taxes but I'm sure they won"t participate in any of the services.

28   drew_eckhardt   2012 Jul 1, 5:09am  

marcus says

Interesting theory, but you're missing a few things. It won't be viewed this way.

Remember, part of the argument for keeping insurance companies in the process is free markets and competition.

You're assuming that health care is a free market which it isn't.

In United States v. South-Eastern Underwriters Association (who controlled 90% of the fire insurance market in six southern states and set non-competitive rates) c. 1944 SCOTUS ruled that insurance was not interstate commerce and therefore could not be regulated by Congress.

Following that descision Congress passed the McCarran-Ferguson act which exempts insurance carriers from most federal regulation including the anti-trust laws.

Competition doesn't and needn't figure into the rates charged. The last increase on my adult son's insurance was from $85 to $140 which is not consistent with a competitive market. Obamacare does not change this.

Hopefully republican's big idea of allowing competition across state lines will be added. There also will be a public option.

There is no public option because the Republicans opposed it.

The closest we come to that is not-for-profit insurance exchanges which provide one-stop shopping for a variety of tiered insurance products with minimum price variations between different for-profit providers that choose to participate.

29   oliverks1   2012 Jul 1, 7:41am  

If we had a free market for health insurance, health insurance companies should be allowed to drop you as soon as you develop a serious health condition. This is the logical and rational thing for them to do.

Wait a minute you say, I would buy from a good company, one that promises not to do this. The problem is that company would have to charge more and more until you say, my god I'm paying for all these sick people, I am switching to a cheaper company - as I won't get sick. As healthy people leave the good company, it will quickly go under.

This is why private health insurance needs to be regulated. Fire insurance is statistically independent (except for wildfires). Life insurance is a one time only event. The total liability in car insurance is limited. These type of insurance products work and work well in the private sector. Health insurance does not, because of the lack of statistical independence between "health events".

The current system is already heavily regulated to avoid some of the problems mentioned above. If you feel Obamacare is bad, you should be pushing for a more free market, so you to can be dropped when you get sick. As costs rise, more people are being pushed out the current system, which is only leading to faster escalating costs for the people left in the system. You might not want to acknowledge it, but someone is already paying for the uninsured right now. At least Obamacare makes it more transparent who is picking up the tab.

If you are against Obamacare and Medicare, what is your solution? Leave it alone? It really is not going to work. Repeal regulation? I admire your bravado, I just hope no one you love gets sick. We need ideas folks.

30   Bellingham Bill   2012 Jul 1, 9:19am  

marcus says

This is a stupid fear.

man, I remember a dorm-room bull session from *1985* going over universal coverage overwhelming the health system due to new demand.

Unbelievable that we're only now moving towards some progress here, but still have the same BS arguments to go through.

31   ForcedTQ   2012 Jul 1, 12:20pm  

Health Care and Health Insurance are two different items, that's the first thing everyone needs to get straight. Health Care, or the actual services rendered for seeing to the health of an individual, vs. a payment method of paying for those services rendered in Health Insurance. As Oliverks1 above pointed out, Health Insurance is a different animal in "almost" every aspect of an insurance payment vehicle when compared to other insurance products, and it seems that it is also one where individuals paying for it seem to be the most removed from seeing the money put in % vs. insurance claims paid, and any other negotiatory services (or monopolistic practices, whatever the case may be) rendered for the claimant.

This Gigantic text of a law is so immense, one could say intentionally so as to inter-twine these two separate services in an attempt to completely confuse and cause a lay person uneducated in legalese to give up whatever feeble attempt they may undertake to understand it before they even get past the first few pages. Then, if they do get so far as the first 100 pages, they have got to the point where that line between health care, and method of payment for that care has been blurred into oblivion.

It's absolute hogwash, congress, senate, do your duties now! (repeal this pig!)

You all would do well to watch this synopsis by Peter Schiff http://www.youtube.com/embed/NNCyEC9r_mk&list=UUIjuLiLHdFxYtFmWlbTGQRQ&index=0&feature=plcp

32   marcus   2012 Jul 1, 1:21pm  

Schiff: Mental masterbation, about the SCOTUS decsion.

He never says anything about the true intent of the ACA, and very little about the expected impact. I don't recall ever hearing someone say so little in 20 minutes of talking.

33   Bellingham Bill   2012 Jul 1, 3:46pm  

ForcedTQ says

This Gigantic text of a law is so immense

This is talking-point bullshit from the right.

PPACA is a law that regulates the largest sector of our economy -- healthcare, ~20% of GDP -- so it needs to be a long law to cover what it does.

Unlike the Republican's Medicare Part D, it needed to be paid for, and that added a lot of words too.

It's absolute hogwash, congress, senate, do your duties now!

You're the hogwash.

PPACA's fundamental effect is just getting everyone into the existing systems of private insurance. It's not HillaryCare, which wanted to replace the existing system with managed insurance programs.

It also allows states to put people making under $15,000/yr on the their state medicaid programs, with the Feds covering 90% of the cost to them.

The amount of outright lying the conservative right is doing about this is really stunning to me. It's (mostly) their damn idea!

The real thing they don't like about PPACA, and the reason they're trying to stir up so resistance to it, is the 3.8% capital gains tax it added to people making bank.

They don't like that, no siree. That's the true point of objection, most everything else is just bullshit.

Reasonable people also understand that the premium subsidies, being more generous than the MA plan, are also going to have to be paid by the 1% in the end, too. That alone will cost about what the Bush tax cut is giving them, $80B/yr or more.

34   ArtimusMaxtor   2012 Jul 1, 7:46pm  

Once again I think the whole thing is ridiculous. I'm sure you all have your little health stories. You could get sick right now and get treated for free at almost any hospital. They usually don't turn sick people away. Everyone in here for the most part is healthy. The earth keeps you really healthy. However you people want to live like hypochondriacs be my guest. When you work for someone they work you like pack mules to begin with. Just the fatigue from the way many of you are worked, debt, expressway time etc. is enough to make someone sick and die at an early age. That don't matter to you keep plowing. Forced slavery they don't live long. Debt servitude I see the same. The only difference one they hold a gun on you and make you labor. The other one you go into debt and have to labor. Both use your labor in any way they like. You better do it. Do it on time. Do it the way they want it. Till they say your done. Buddy don't fall asleep cause the boss mans a coming. Servitude means you don't know what its like to be free. Of course Jesus said "Serve one another". So were here to serve each other, horseshit. "Healthcare" another scheme isn't going to solve that. It isn't going to make you free either.

Don't put yourself in the "hole".

http://www.youtube.com/embed/oudNoKfNUfs

35   ForcedTQ   2012 Jul 2, 12:41am  

marcus says

Schiff: Mental masterbation, about the SCOTUS decsion.

He never says anything about the true intent of the ACA, and very little about the expected impact. I don't recall ever hearing someone say so little in 20 minutes of talking.

Did you watch the entire video? Or did you turn it off after the first 30 seconds, or, watch it at all? His points in the video about the actual premium payment pyramid where by individuals can move from insurance company to insurance company unencumbered by previous conditions make a valid point of why even the current private health insurance system is extremely flawed.

No reason to talk about the SCOTUS decision? Why, because it is said and done, and there is nothing we can do about it? I ask that you not be a member of the "Do as you're told" club.

By the way, do you know what the actual true intent of the ACA is, and if by way of this "law" it is even going to be achievable? Being honest for myself, I haven't been able to figure the entire thing out yet.

Don't get me wrong, they way things are set up now are FAWKED up! The way that the ACA will have them, what we are all changing to now, don't seem to be any better. It just seems that the wolves will now be receiving a somewhat higher stream of funding. If they bet well with it, do you really think we will see lower or even steady premiums as a result of the profits they make?

36   ArtimusMaxtor   2012 Jul 2, 1:05am  

Jews continually score 39 point higher in any kind of IQ test. Quick. Semites I watched Lewis Black the other night. He's funny.

http://www.youtube.com/embed/LGrlWOhtj3g

37   marcus   2012 Jul 2, 4:47am  

ForcedTQ says

Did you watch the entire video?

Yes. I may have skipped throuh a minute here and there when he repeated himself.

ForcedTQ says

By the way, do you know what the actual true intent of the ACA is

OF course. Above all it's about covering preexisitng conditions and taking away lifetime caps, and expanding access. Not even considering what happens to premiums, everyone must be covered if you want to address preexisting conditions, hence the mandate. But since the mandate also forces relatively young and or healthy to have health insurance, it at least partially pays for the benefits I just mentioned.

In other threads, I mentioned that I have a chronic health issue, and that I don't go to the doctor all that frequently. And in the past, I addressed my issues (its an intestinal/digestive thing) with diet and alternative medicine.

Want to guess one of the big reasons why ? Because I knew that if I stayed away from doctors about my health issues (which started when I was a child) long enough, it would not be a preexisting condition, and I would be able to get insurance, at my next job or later, and i wouldn't have to worry about being discriminated against for my health issues.

(it was also because I knew that doctors didn't really understand my condition that well and were likely to prescribe toxic medicines or use surgery (again) - but that's another story)

My situation isn't and wasn't all that bad (except for a couple periods of time) but can you imagine having a REALLY serious health issue and being dropped from insurance, and not being able to get new insurance ? What if you're relatively low income and your child has a health problem or illness that's going to extremely expensive to treat ?

Just out of luck ? AS it stands now, this means bankruptcy, and maybe worse.

ForcedTQ says

The way that the ACA will have them, what we are all changing to now, don't seem to be any better.

???

38   zzyzzx   2012 Jul 2, 5:56am  

Better Yahoo article on Obamacare tax increases:

http://finance.yahoo.com/blogs/daily-ticker/taxes-going-pay-pay-obamacare-145413745.html

Here are some of the new taxes you're going to have to pay to pay for Obamacare:

A 3.8% surtax on "investment income" when your adjusted gross income is more than $200,000 ($250,000 for joint-filers). What is "investment income?" Dividends, interest, rent, capital gains, annuities, house sales, partnerships, etc. Taxes on dividends will rise from 15% to 18.8%--if Congress extends the Bush tax cuts. If Congress does not extend the Bush tax cuts, taxes on dividends will rise from 15% to a shocking 43.8%. (WSJ)
A 0.9% surtax on Medicare taxes for those making $200,000 or more ($250,000 joint). You already pay Medicare tax of 1.45%, and your employer pays another 1.45% for you (unless you're self-employed, in which case you pay the whole 2.9% yourself). Next year, your Medicare bill will be 2.35%. (WSJ)
Flexible Spending Account contributions will be capped at $2,500. Currently, there is no tax-related limit on how much you can set aside pre-tax to pay for medical expenses. Next year, there will be. If you have been socking away, say, $10,000 in your FSA to pay medical bills, you'll have to cut that to $2,500. (ATR.org)
The itemized-deduction hurdle for medical expenses is going up to $10,000. Right now, any medical expenses over $7,500 per year are deductible. Next year, that hurdle will be $10,000. (ATR.org)
The penalty on non-medical withdrawals from Healthcare Savings Accounts is now 20% instead of 10%. That's twice the penalty that applies to annuities, IRAs, and other tax-free vehicles. (ATR.org)
A tax of 10% on indoor tanning services. This has been in place for two years, since the summer of 2010. (ATR.org)
A 40% tax on "Cadillac Health Care Plans" starting in 2018.Those whose employers pay for all or most of comprehensive healthcare plans (costing $10,200 for an individual or $27,500 for families) will have to pay a 40% tax on the amount their employer pays. The 2018 start date is said to have been a gift to unions, which often have comprehensive plans. (ATR.org)
A"Medicine Cabinet Tax" that eliminates the ability to pay for over-the-counter medicines from a pre-tax Flexible Spending Account. This started in January 2011. (ATR.org)
A "penalty" tax for those who don't buy health insurance. This will phase in from 2014-2016. It will range from $695 per person to about $4,700 per person, depending on your income. (More details here.)
A tax on medical devices costing more than $100. Starting in 2013, medical device manufacturers will have to pay a 2.3% excise tax on medical equipment. This is expected to raise the cost of medical procedures. (Breitbart.com)

So those are some of the new taxes you'll be paying that will help pay for Obamacare.

Any big ones I've missed?

Note that these taxes are both "progressive" (aimed at rich people) and "regressive" (aimed at the middle class and poor people). The big ones--the 3.8% investment income hike and the Medicare tax increase--only hit you if you're making more than $200,000 a year. The rest hit you no matter how much you're making.

Anyone else think that these alone won't pay for the extra deadbeats we will be supporting with Obamacare?

39   StoutFiles   2012 Jul 2, 6:00am  

zzyzzx says

Anyone else think that these alone won't pay for the extra deadbeats we will be supporting with Obamacare?

Yep, this is all about continuing the support of deadbeats. This is what we should do to all the freeloaders...

40   FortWayne   2012 Jul 2, 6:05am  

Unions are probably the most upset group over this. Every single one of them have "cadillac" plans. They get to pay taxes into the system.

Of course they are going to try to stick taxpayers with it, but that's a whole other story.

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