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President Bush Releases Proposed FY 09 Budget | NAIFA GovWatch | Advocacy | NAIFA
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NAIFA GovWatch

President Bush Releases Proposed FY 09 Budget

Issue(s): Tax; Health Insurance
Date: February 4, 2008

As a follow up to his State of the Union speech last week, President Bush has sent his proposed FY 09 budget to Capitol Hill. It contains little in the way of new ideas, but reprises a number of proposals Congress has already repeatedly rejected. These include renewed calls for permanently repealing the estate tax, a permanent 15 percent rate on capital gains and dividends, a redo of savings plans and rules that result in only one kind of employee deferral retirement savings plan, one kind of individual retirement savings plan, and only one kind of tax-favored short-term savings plan, a replacement of tax-free employer-provided health insurance with a deduction for individually purchased health insurance, expanded health savings account rules, and permanent authority to make a direct tax-free gift to charity from an IRA.

The Proposals:  The general details of each of these proposals are as follows:

Action Taken: The president’s budget proposal is the first step in fashioning the budget under which all federal spending and certain tax laws will be written this year. The budget and tax writing committees in both the House and Senate will hold hearings on the president’s budget proposal over the course of the next week or two. Congress (via the House and Senate Budget Committees) will then write the budget which will control spending and tax bills this year.

Insider News: Most insiders—on and off the Hill—do not believe that the Administration’s FY 09 budget proposals will be acceptable to Congress. However, there may be some real debate over whether to make the estate tax repeal permanent (or how to permanently reform it), and where to set capital gains and dividends tax rates. Replacing tax-favored employer-provided health insurance with a deduction for individuals is unlikely to be taken seriously by Congress this year. NAIFA’s health and employee benefits advocate, AHIA, will be watching (and, if required lobbying) this proposal carefully. There may be some discussion about the suggested expansions for health savings accounts. The renewed call for RSAs, LSAs and ERSAs will almost certainly just be ignored on Capitol Hill this year.

Next Steps: The budget law requires Congress to write its budget blueprint by mid-April—although it is rare for Congress to meet its deadline. Of most concern to NAIFA members and their clients is whether Congress approves a budget that authorizes special protection for tax legislation (the “reconciliation instructions”) to avoid a filibuster (and thus require only a simple majority to pass the Senate. If a tax bill moves with reconciliation protection, offsets (revenue raisers) have a much better chance for being enacted into law.

NAIFA Staff Contact: Jill Edwards, Director, Federal Relations, 703-770-8158

AHIA Staff Contact: For additional information on the health-specific proposals, please contact Diane Boyle. This service is provided to AHIA Members only.  

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