Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Have a Coke and a tax


Nothing is sacred when Democrats try to find funding for new social programs. There are reports Democratic Senators are discussing a tax on sugary drinks to help pay help pay for Obama's health care plan. The cost of the plan is around $1.2 trillion and Democrats are struggling to come up with the money. The Obama administration has already lied about not raising taxes on those making under $250,000. They hiked taxes on cigarettes earlier this year. Will obesity be the new "sin" tax? The Wall Street Journal reported:
Senate leaders are considering new federal taxes on soda and other sugary drinks to help pay for an overhaul of the nation's health-care system.

The taxes would pay for only a fraction of the cost to expand health-insurance coverage to all Americans and would face strong opposition from the beverage industry. They also could spark a backlash from consumers who would have to pay several cents more for a soft drink.

On Tuesday, the Senate Finance Committee is set to hear proposals from about a dozen experts about how to pay for the comprehensive health-care overhaul that President Barack Obama wants to enact this year. Early estimates put the cost of the plan at around $1.2 trillion. The administration has so far only earmarked funds for about half of that amount.

The Center for Science in the Public Interest, a Washington-based watchdog group that pressures food companies to make healthier products, plans to propose a federal excise tax on soda, certain fruit drinks, energy drinks, sports drinks and ready-to-drink teas. It would not include most diet beverages. Excise taxes are levied on goods and manufacturers typically pass them on to consumers.

Senior staff members for some Democratic senators at the center of the effort to craft health-care legislation are weighing the idea behind closed doors, Senate aides said.

The Congressional Budget Office, which is providing lawmakers with cost estimates for each potential change in the health overhaul, included the option in a broad report on health-system financing in December. The office estimated that adding a tax of three cents per 12-ounce serving to these types of sweetened drinks would generate $24 billion over the next four years. So far, lawmakers have not indicated how big a tax they are considering.

1 comment:

Steel Phoenix said...

maybe instead of taxing us for corn syrup we have already been taxed to subsidize, they should just remove the corn subsidies.