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The Biden administration is touting a record 16.6 million people who signed up for health coverage that starts Jan. 1.
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) said Friday that, of the 16.6 million signees this year, 2 million were new signups.
And demographic analysis...apparently shows that:
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But it is like all benefits...the right wingers opposed to benefits aren't opposed to benefits, they are just opposed to benefits for others.
All sorts of things are eligible. Amazon has an FSA/HSA store that is great for ideas - buy it locally and it will use more of the accumulated funds.Just going over my flexible spend account, I have $1200 left in my account and I’m looking what is and isn’t eligible. It’s kind of stupid that I can’t use it on toothpaste and mouthwash but I can use it for viagra.
I’m going tomorrow and stocking up on OTC supplies before I lose all that money.
Or anywhere else in the civilized world.^ Too bad you aren't in Canada.
For those who somehow think that Trump is going to make people's lives better, here's something that actually will thanks to BidenCo.
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Wouldn't matter. The tax code was changed in 2017 in the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 (TCJA) {aka the "Trump tax cuts"). The TCJA increased the standard deduction (which means fewer people can itemize their deductions) which means most people don't qualify to deduct any medical expenses.Too bad it didn't include a provision that the first $5k in medical expenses can be taken as a tax credit.
That's why I said tax credit -- that's something that isn't deducted from taxable income, it reduces the amount of tax itself. Ideally it would be a refundable tax credit so if it reduces tax payable to below zero then it gets added to any refund, but Congress prefers non-refundable tax credits except for corporations. For anyone interested in free markets that should have been a no-brainer.Wouldn't matter. The tax code was changed in 2017 in the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 (TCJA) {aka the "Trump tax cuts"). The TCJA increased the standard deduction (which means fewer people can itemize their deductions)
The goal was to get rid of the medical expenses deduction, which is did. If they were to do anything, they should make OOP health insurance premiums deductible.That's why I said tax credit -- that's something that isn't deducted from taxable income, it reduces the amount of tax itself. Ideally it would be a refundable tax credit so if it reduces tax payable to below zero then it gets added to any refund, but Congress prefers non-refundable tax credits except for corporations. For anyone interested in free markets that should have been a no-brainer.
I had a professor in Tax Accounting who told students on day 1 to ignore the logic they had learned in Intro to Accounting 101 and 102. Tax legislation isn't logical, it's pork. The goal was to make it so that only the well-to-do can itemize (and to screw taxpayers from blue leaning states). It accomplished the goal.The TCJA did things backwards anyway: the standard deduction should have been locked at $5k while the individual exemption should have been raised to $12,500 with annual adjustment upwards for inflation.
I'd still make the first $5k of all medical expenses a tax credit. It would effectively make basic health care single-payer using the IRS as the accounting department.The goal was to get rid of the medical expenses deduction, which is did. If they were to do anything, they should make OOP health insurance premiums deductible.
