Heritage
Foundation
Morning Bell: How to Use
Obamacare to Scam Taxpayers
By Amy Payne
July 30, 2013
Looking
for a little extra cash? If you’re interested in
defrauding taxpayers, it might be as easy as writing down a number on a
form.
The
number is your income. The form is the Obamacare application.
If
you do not have “affordable” employer-sponsored health
insurance and your income is between about $31,800 and $94,200 for a
family of
four (that is, between 138 percent and 400 percent of the federal
poverty
level), you qualify for an insurance subsidy through Obamacare.
But
when you apply for coverage in the Obamacare insurance
exchange, it’s up to you to report your income accurately. It turns out
that
the IRS won’t be checking everyone’s Obamacare applications.
Heritage
health care expert Chris Jacobs ran the numbers to show
what a difference a little fraud can make. He took a hypothetical
family of
four with $90,000 in income who were eligible for coverage through the
exchange.
If this family were honest, they would receive a subsidy of $2,997 to
help
cover their insurance premiums.
But
if that same family put down $35,000 as their income instead,
they would receive $10,175 from taxpayers. Even if they were caught,
they would
have to pay back only $2,500 of their ill-gotten subsidy, due to a
loophole in
Obamacare.
Will
anyone be checking? It’s doubtful, Jacobs writes:
Supporters
of the law claim this scenario will not happen, due to
the penalties associated with misrepresenting information on
application forms
and tax documents. But with government auditors noting the exchanges
have
missed critical deadlines, and Obamacare anti-fraud investigations
being
cancelled, will the federal government really have the resources
necessary to
enforce the law, much less ensure taxpayer funds are not being abused?
Congress
should not expose taxpayers to this kind of liability.
It’s another reason to defund Obamacare.
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