Merrill Matthews at Forbes
explains:
[T]he IRS has no authority to go after someone’s assets or wages in
order to collect the penalty. It only has the authority to deduct the
penalty from a person’s tax refund at year’s end. It won’t take long
for people to figure out how to fix that problem by trying to ensure
they have only enough withheld to meet their tax obligation. Those who
are uninsured and successful at hitting the tax mark will face no
effective penalty.
Here's another loophole (via Matthews)
But just because millions of Americans refuse to get
ObamaCare-qualified coverage doesn’t mean they will be uninsured. There
are policies available now that would work very well for the ObamaCare
avoiders.
Some of these policies are built on a life insurance platform rather
than health insurance — which, incidentally, means they are outside
ObamaCare’s long arm of regulatory control.
The customer buys a life insurance policy that pays up to $250,000 upon
death, which I believe is the current maximum available for this kind of
policy.
Along with life insurance coverage the policy includes what’s called a
“critical illness” component. If the policyholder needs, say, surgery,
the insurer writes the policyholder a check based on a schedule. Let’s
say, for example, it’s $10,000.
The policyholder has $10,000 in hand to pay for the medical care — or,
frankly, anything else since the money belongs to the insured — but the
value of his life insurance benefit is reduced by the same amount, to
$240,000. Thus the critical illness component simply accelerates the
benefit payout.
One existing policy pays 100 percent for heart attack, stroke,
life-threatening cancer, major organ transplant, kidney failure,
Alzheimer’s and paralysis, among other medical conditions.
The policyholder could also be part of a provider network that provides a
discounted rate for the care — one of the most important current
benefits of having health insurance.
How much would such a policy cost? For one company, a 30-year-old male
would pay $1,438 a year, and for a 50-year-old male it’s $3,234.
And remember, this isn’t just health coverage. In the event of a tragic
accident or illness, whatever is left of the benefit goes to the estate
upon death.
If ObamaCare proves to be the train wreck that Democratic Senator Max
Baucus fears — who, incidentally, is largely responsible for its current
structure — then millions of Americans from all income categories may
decide to opt out. Many will still want something, at least until they
get a major medical condition whereupon they can then go back into
ObamaCare coverage. And they can still keep their life insurance policy
along with its critical illness benefits.
Good times!
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