I guess I feel a little stronger about it than that. But I cannot argue that there is a benefit to the "greater good", if that "greater good" is measured at society's level.
I employ lots of people...and a lot more than TTH's dirty dozen. And I provide health care benefits for all of them...well, all full time. There is a sharing of the costs between them and me...but I provide considerable (well more than 1/2). There are folks who work for me (I guess you would call them HR folks) that utilize the tax laws to the most advantage...cafeteria plans, medical savings accounts, life insurance benefits, etc. But at the end of the day, I have only so much of the revenue that I can allocate to employee costs. Beyond that, I've got to cut costs or raise revenues. So, I guess in your example, if we are going to allocate the $7K "tax advantage" to someone...I would allocate it to the employee. Even though I recognize, under the "greater good" theory, it helps hold my costs down, gives employees an added benefit, and as such reduces my costs to consumers. In the end, the IRS must raise that revenue from some other source to fill its coffers. I just don't like the fact that it is even hinted like this is some "employer tax swindle". If it has some stink on it (and I don't think it really does), the smell comes more from the employee benefit side than the employer benefit side.
I did ask TTH about his views regarding spending more money on married employees as opposed to single employees...at least in the providing of health care benefits. I do the same thing...but it does seem to be a "screw job" to single folks. But I'm just a lowly capitalist trying to scrape out a living the best way I can. I don't have his lofty goals of fair and balanced for all concerned. I'm curious how the "Wisdom of Soloman" deals with such issues.
Originally Posted by Rudyard K
I don't disagree with anything you have written above. I can also appreciate your sensitivity to something even faintly smelling of an "employer tax swindle" but I think we are getting into semantics to some extent trying to allocate the "tax benefit" or "advantage" to one party (employer) vs. another (employee).
Bottomline is, as the IRS Code reads today, employer-paid healthcare is "advantaged" to somebody and in a competitve marketplace for employees it is, simply put, "good business" to offer it in many instances.
As I've stated before, I'd love to blow up the current IRS treatment so it is no longer tax advantaged and offering it as a benefit is no longer "good business," but that is not the case today.
As for TTH's Dirty Dozen, it is "good business" (given the current IRS code) for him to pay 100%. Without getting into personal info & for the sake of argument, I'll just assume he runs a small law firm of relatively highly paid professionals that value a strong health care program & appreciate the value of him providing it at its tax advantaged status. It is good business for him and his employees to do that. I have a family member that is an employee at a much larger place but is in a similar situation. The median salary/bonus is >$250k/year. It makes (business) sense for her employer to do a 100% paid HC plan and gold plated benefit program. But these shops are in the vast minority.
As RK says (& again without getting into personal info & for the sake of discussion I'll make the assumption that his business has a lot more diversity in compensation and at median is lower), "there are only so many dollars to go around." The 100% Gold Plated plan just isn't practical. Nor is it practical for the vast majority of employers.