This year Congress will consider proposals to significantly restrict the access of not-for-profit healthcare organizations to affordable capital and other federal benefits of their tax-exempt status. The federal benefits of tax-exempt status are (1) exemption from federal tax on net income, (2) eligibility for tax-deductible charitable contributions, and (3) access to tax-exempt financing. Of these, the last is probably most important because hospitals' capital needs are substantial and almost always met through the issuance of tax-exempt bonds. In recent years, budget pressures have prompted many state and local governments to challenge the tax-exempt status of not-for-profit organizations. At the federal level, tax-exempt bonds have been under sustained attack for the past 10 years, and tax-exempt organizations have been under scrutiny for the past 4 years. In 1989 several bills were introduced in Congress that would limit some of the benefits of tax exemption. This year the signs are particularly ominous: Budget pressures are severe, no one seems willing to call for "new taxes," and tax-exempt organizations are considered fair game. To preserve their tax-exempt status, not-for-profits must act now to convince congressional decision makers that they deserve their tax exemptions and need them to continue to provide community service.
CITATION STYLE
Fiduccia, P. C. (1990). Under the gun. Health Progress (Saint Louis, Mo.), 71(3), 59–63, 74. https://doi.org/10.5744/florida/9780813034881.003.0004
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