This blog by a tax professor is about tax reform and moving tax systems into the 21st century. It focuses on tax system weaknesses, critiques selected reform proposals, and offers new ideas, with an emphasis on federal, California and multistate matters. Additional information - articles, reports and links, can be found at the 21st Century Taxation website (see link below right). I welcome your comments.
Friday, April 17, 2015
Guest Post - Resolving a Premium Tax Credit Problem
In a 3/26/15 post, I described an Affordable Care Act oddity of someone starting the year getting the Premium Tax Credit (PTC) in advance because their income qualified them for it. But later in the year, their income increases and they lose all or part of their PTC. That caught the attention of financial executive Randall Bolten, author of Painting with Numbers: Presenting Financials and Other Numbers So People Will Understand You (John Wiley & Sons, 2012).
He suggests that a compensation practice can be used to help address this payback problem. He notes that this problem is caused by the legislation’s failure to address the impact of significant income fluctuations throughout the year. An approach that could deal with this takes a page from “accelerated” sales commission plans, where commission rates increase as sales volume increases. To see how this might work, he offers an explanation along with charts and graphs.
Please click here to see Randall Bolten's full post with all of the graphs and details. Thank you.
What do you think?
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