WASHINGTON – Ask Marc Goldwein at the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget how to pay for repeal of the medical device tax and he reels off a dozen precise solutions.
Ask the same question of members of the Minnesota congressional delegation who are leading the charge to kill the device tax, and hemming and hawing starts.
While many in the U.S. Senate and House pay lip service to ending the sales tax on medical devices that was instituted to help pay for national health care reform, no consensus exists about exactly how.
The reticence, says University of Minnesota political scientist Larry Jacobs, combines an old trick with a new dynamic.
"Skillful politicians use ambiguity to try to please competing interests," Jacobs said. "This is one of those increasingly difficult debates around health reform where you've got very significant and important state interests colliding with other goals."
The situation is delicate enough that Rep. Erik Paulsen, R-Minn., the self-styled leader of House device tax opponents, declined to be interviewed about specific ways he hopes to offset $26 billion in federal revenue lost over 10 years if the device tax disappears. The Senate rejected an offset Paulsen proposed in an earlier device tax repeal passed by the House. This year, he offered a device tax repeal bill without explaining how to pay for it and deferred to "leadership" in the House and Senate to settle on exactly what that would be.
Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., has offered a device tax repeal bill in the Senate with Republican Orrin Hatch that does not specify an offset.
"We are in the process of looking at different proposals, running the numbers to see if we can come up with one or a combination that has bipartisan support," said Klobuchar. Congress' Joint Committee on Taxation has lowered the revenue loss from repealing the tax from $30 billion over ten years to $26 billion, Klobuchar said.