Senior Connection

Dec 19, 2011

Top 10 Stories of 2011

Huffinton Post
Here Are 2011's Top 10 Stories, In Order, From Ballots Cast, Huffingtonpost

OSAMA BIN LADEN'S DEATH: He'd been the world's most-wanted terrorist for nearly a decade, ever since a team of his al-Qaida followers carried out the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. In May, the long and often-frustrating manhunt ended with a nighttime assault by a helicopter-borne special operations squad on his compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan. Bin Laden was shot dead by one of the raiders, and within hours his body was buried at sea.

JAPAN'S TRIPLE DISASTER: A 9.0-magnitude earthquake off Japan's northeast coast in March unleashed a tsunami that devastated scores of communities, leaving nearly 20,000 people dead or missing and wreaking an estimated $218 billion in damage.

ARAB SPRING: It began with demonstrations in Tunisia that rapidly toppled the longtime strongman. Spreading like a wildfire, the Arab Spring protests sparked a revolution in Egypt that ousted Hosni Mubarak, fueled a civil war in Libya that climaxed with Moammar Gadhafi's death, and fomented a bloody uprising in Syria against the Assad regime. Bahrain and Yemen also experienced major protests and unrest.

EU FISCAL CRISIS:

US ECONOMY:

PENN STATE SEX ABUSE SCANDAL: One of America's most storied college football programs was tarnished in a scandal that prompted the firing of Hall of Fame football coach Joe Paterno.

GADHAFI TOPPLED IN LIBYA: After nearly 42 years of mercurial and often brutal rule, Moammar Gadhafi was toppled by his own people. Anti-government protests escalated into an eight-month rebellion, backed by NATO bombing, that shattered his regime, and Gadhafi finally was tracked down and killed in the fishing village where he was born.

FISCAL SHOWDOWNS IN CONGRESS: Partisan divisions in Congress led to several showdowns on fiscal issues. A fight over the debt ceiling prompted Standard & Poor's to strip the U.S. of its AAA credit rating. Later, the so-called "supercommittee" failed to agree on a deficit-reduction package of at least $1.2 trillion — potentially triggering automatic spending cuts of that amount starting in 2013.

OCCUPY WALL STREET PROTESTS:

GABRIELLE GIFFORDS SHOT: The popular third-term congresswoman from Arizona suffered a severe brain injury when she and 18 other people were shot by a gunman as she met with constituents outside a Tucson supermarket in January. Six people died, and Giffords' painstaking recovery is still in progress.

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Dec 6, 2011

Why You Should Care About The 'Medical Loss Ratio'

Atlantic Wire - Ted Mann - December 3rd
Unless you are a health care worker or a health care industry employee, you likely haven't given a ton of thought to the medical loss ratio. That is, simply stated, the percentage of health insurance company spending that actually goes to pay for the medical care delivered to people.

If you are a health care industry employee, particularly one of the executive variety, you have likely given a lot of thought to the medical loss ratio in the last several years, and especially in the past day. That's because the federal Department of Health and Human Services just issued its final rule on the topic, implementing an aspect of the Obama health care law that played little part in the public debate, but matters tremendously to insurance companies.

Under the new rules, insurers must spend at least 80 percent of the money they take in from insurance premiums (less taxes and fees) toward providing health care to their customers. If they don't spend that percentage, insurers will now be required to send rebates back to the people paying the premiums.

A thorough explanation of the rule and its effects is at Health Affairs. Over at Forbes, Rick Ungar writes that this is the actual "bomb" health insurers were worried about in the otherwise not-all-that-radical Obamacare bill.

Dec 1, 2011

Should There Be Sales Taxes On Internet Purchases?

This Nation.com
American Government and Politics Online

An increasingly large number of Americans are shopping online, browsing catalogues, selecting items and making purchases from the comfort of their own homes. Beyond convenience, one of the most attractive aspects of online shopping, at least to consumers, is that very few online "stores" charge sales tax, meaning that shoppers pay even lower prices for what they buy online than they would in a traditional store. The days of tax free Internet shopping, however, may be short-lived. Should there be sales tax on Internet purchases or should web shopping remain "tax free"?

To answer this question fairly, it is important to put the sales tax in its proper perspective. Most state and local governments rely heavily on sales tax revenues to fund a wide variety of government functions and programs. All but five states collect a sales tax of some kind or another. The states that collect sales taxes do so in a variety of different ways--some states tax virtually all purchases while others tax a narrower range of purchases. The most commonly exempted class of purchases is food. Tax rates also vary quite widely, from as low as 0.5% in Hawaii to 7.25% in California. Additional sales taxes are also collected in many counties and cities on top of established state sales tax rates.

State and local governments have generally established their taxation and spending patterns over long periods of time, adjusting for local and regional economic conditions and spending requirements when necessary. While it is impossible to anticipate every possible contingency, one of the most important functions of state and local governments is to plan ahead and establish taxation systems that will work down the road as well as today. Each state and local government has developed a mixture of sales, income, property and other taxes to bring in the revenues each needs to maintain roads and highways, build schools, pay teachers, etc. When one or more of a state or local government's expected revenue sources is curtailed or eliminated, its budget plans are no longer useful and it must either scramble for new revenue or cut spending. Neither one of these tends to be very popular with the public.

So, should sales tax be collected on Internet purchases? Ultimately, the answer comes down to this: Most state and local government tax systems and budget plans would be seriously disrupted if sales tax revenue disappeared altogether. If an increasingly larger proportion of purchases are made sales tax-free on the Internet, there will be a fiscal crisis in most states and localities. State and local governments will either have to raise revenue in other ways, by increasing income or property taxes, for example, or by cutting spending.

Most of the uproar over taxation of purchases made on the Internet seems to arise from the perception that any tax on online purchases would be a new form of taxation. This is simply not the case. Purchases off-line have been taxed for decades. Shopping online may be different in many ways, but money is still being exchanged for goods and services. Those purchases would be taxable under any other circumstances, i.e. if the purchases were made anywhere but on the Internet.

Taxing Internet purchases is further complicated because most purchases are made across state borders. In such cases, where should the tax be collected? At the point of sale or the point of delivery? If the tax is collected at the point of sale, there would probably be a migration of online stores to sales tax-free states. The most workable idea would probably be to require the tax to be paid to the state or local government where the purchaser lives. The drawback to this, however, is that at least one rationale for collecting sales taxes in the first place is to provide state and local governments the money they need to build roads, sewers and provide other services that allow businesses to do what they do. If sales taxes are collected in the states and localities where buyers live, the states and localities where sellers are located may not be able to collect the revenues they need.

The issue of sales tax collection on Internet sales is a complicated one. If people want to shop online--and more and more are doing so every day--and they don't want to be charged a sales tax when they do so, they should realize that they will either have to pay those taxes in other ways or be prepared to see reductions in state and local government services. And as states and local governments come to grips with the evolving nature of commerce, they will have to develop new ways of thinking about and administering tax systems.

THE MISSION OF CENTRAL MASSACHUSETTS AGENCY
ON AGING

To Enhance The Quality Of Life For Area Seniors And Their Caregivers, The Central Massachusetts Agency On Aging Will Provide Leadership, Information And Resources, Coordination Of Services And Advocacy.