My understanding is that if you have employer paid insurance and it exceeds 9.5% of your income, then you will be taxed on the excess amount over 9.5%. They are called Cadillac plans. Don't know when it kicks in or if the percentage is correct.
If that's true then the dumbasses will be even more ticked. If it operates as stated, then if one makes enough money, they can outpace that tax so essentially it will be lower to middle income folks with 'cadillac plans' who will get taxed since their income is too low to ever overtake those premiums.
For example make 100K x .095= a plan whose premiums are no more then 9500.00 dollars
Make 50K x .095= a plan whose premiums are no more then 4250.00 dollars.
Lets say the same two work for the same employer and are offered the same plan that costs 7000.00 a year...One assumes the person making 50K will get taxed on that additional difference between the 9.5 % and the cost of the premium, yet the person making 100K is still well under the amount that would constitute a cadillac plan. I have no idea as to the exact language either, but if it is states as a percentage of income to premiums and plans are essentially the same for most workers in an organization then the lower income employees are going to get hit hardest. Dumbasses.