Monday, September 14, 2009

The health care "reformers" go after medical technology

Sunday, September 13, 2009
By TigerHawk

As we have long predicted on this blog, the health care "reformers" propose to finance at least part of the "savings" or new benefits -- it is impossible to know which -- by decreasing the rate of return on medical technology. There are many ways in which this might be done, but the Senate Democrats are proposing to do so directly, by levying a "value added tax" on medical device companies according to their proportion of U.S. sales. This tax would be without regard to profitability, so it would amount to a capital tax on start-ups and a massive income tax surcharge on profitable companies, varying as net margins do. In the case of my own mid-sized company, the tax would be the equivalent of a roughly 20% surcharge on our net income (in all likelihood raising our economic tax rate well above 50%) or 50% of our research and development budget, depending on how you want to look at it.

Any way you look at it, the proposed tax is a calculated effort to divert capital from the medical technology industry to other uses in the economy, because new medical technology drives costs that are now going to be assumed by the government (or at least will be if the Senate leadership gets its way). Of course, innovative medtech also extends and saves lives, and makes them more comfortable and more productive. Which is, after all, the point of medicine. the rest

1 Comments:

At 3:51 PM, Blogger Undergroundpewster said...

Here is how it works:

Goal: To cut health care spending, but make sure it doesn't happen overnight or else you, the politician, will be blamed

Plan: Slow or stop the development of new treatments and tests and procedures. Create disincentives now to keep smart young people out of medical research. The inertia of medical research will continue to provide enough progress to satisfy the public, but wait 20 years and the goal will be reached. By that time you will be long gone.

 

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