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This study analyzes the effects of a variety of forms of tax credits, especially for workers whose incomes place them above the poverty line but below the median family income.
This volumedescribes how insurance markets actually adjust premiums to risk, and they evaluate various proposals for regulating how premiums should vary with risk.
Providing health insurance for the 45 million Americans without coverage will be one of the leading domestic issues in the next election. Most people who are uninsured do not have the opportunity to purchase coverage through an employer, and have access to coverage only through the individual insurance market. That...
In this seminar in AEI's tax policy series, Prof. Mark Pauly and Bradley Herring of the University of Pennsylvania discuss the options available in the design of refundable tax credits for health insurance purchases. They compare three alternative types of tax credit schemes: fixed-dollar credits toward the purchase of a...
Mark V. Pauly and Bradley Herring analyzed the options available in the design of tax credits for health insurance and presented their findings.
This study analyzes the effects of a variety of forms of tax credits, especially for workers whose incomes place them above the poverty line but below the median family income.
The problem of covering Americans with preexisting conditions is certainly real, but the notion that the only way to solve it is through a massive transformation of America's healthcare system is simply wrong.
Changing the 1943 policy on the exclusion of employer-provided health insurance from taxable income wil help create a more efficient health care system.





