Leonard Burman
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Leonard Burman
Leonard "Len" E. Burmanis a nationally recognized economist, tax policy expert, and writer who currently serves as the Robert C. Pozen Director of the Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center, and the Daniel Patrick Moynihan Professor of Public Affairs at the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs at Syracuse University...
aid cost employers encourage families generous individual insurance modest mostly overly people provide providing purchase since upside
The subsidies encourage people to get insurance at work, stifling the individual non-group market, and they encourage employers to provide overly generous insurance since the cost is subsidized. What's more, the subsidy is upside down - aiding mostly the high-income families that would probably purchase insurance under any scenario, and providing little aid to those of modest means.
dealt problem
This is a problem that should have been dealt with when we had the money, and it wasn't.
credits employer experience past
The experience with past employer (tax) credits is they're not particularly effective,
deficit smaller voluntary
The deficit is a little smaller because of this voluntary tax.