Insurers
pay more tax on executive compensation under Obamacare: study
Send a link to a friend
[August 27, 2014]
By Caroline Humer
(Reuters) - When Washington eliminated
corporate tax deductions on health insurance executive compensation
above $500,000 under President Barack Obama's healthcare reform law in
2013, it generated more than $72 million in additional tax revenue for
the U.S. government, a left-leaning think tank said on Wednesday.
|
The report from the Institute for Policy Studies examined executive
compensation in the 2013 proxy filings from WellPoint Inc and
UnitedHealth Group Inc, among others, and found that those companies
paid more taxes than they would have if the law had not been passed.
The study, written by a team that focuses on executive compensation
issues, provides a look into how much revenue the government could
raise if it eliminated this deduction more broadly.
After examining the 10 largest publicly traded health insurers, it
found that corporate taxes on their pay would likely increase in
coming years because some 2013 compensation included stock options
that predated the law.
Based on those disclosures, it calculated the corporate tax each
company paid on the compensation of the top five executives versus
what the companies would have paid based on the U.S. tax code that
applied to insurers prior to 2013 and that continues to be used by
most other U.S. corporations outside of the health insurance
industry.
The report said that if all corporations were to be taxed this way,
it would raise $50 billion more in revenue for the U.S. government.
"I do see real momentum in applying this across the board," Sarah
Anderson, Global Economy Project Director at the institute and a
report author, said. "The report shows that the sky is not falling
on these companies."
Health insurers have been at the center of the national healthcare
reform law, which has set new benefit standards for coverage,
changed government payments for private Medicare benefits, expanded
Medicaid to more income levels and created a new type of health
insurance for individuals.
The law also instituted limits on insurer profit and created new
premium rate review procedures and taxes for insurers and
corporations.
[to top of second column] |
Brendan Buck, a spokesman for the insurance industry's largest
lobbying group, America's Health Insurance Plans, said, "Requiring
plans to pay higher taxes does nothing to make coverage more
affordable or accessible."
The nation's biggest health insurer, UnitedHealth, had the largest
change in corporate tax payments under the new rules, according to
the report. It paid $19 million more in corporate taxes, based on a
rate of 35 percent.
WellPoint lowered its 2013 corporate tax bill by more than $1.5
million by accelerating the vesting of executive stock awards into
late 2012 just before the reform took place, the report said. The
company, which reported compensation on six executives in its proxy,
paid about $10 million more in corporate taxes in 2013 than it would
have under the old rules.
WellPoint declined to comment. UnitedHealth was not immediately
available.
(Reporting by Caroline Humer in New York; editing by Matthew Lewis)
[© 2014 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2014 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|