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McConnell Reveals Senate Tax Bill Will Include Repeal Of Obamacare Mandate

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McConnell Reveals Senate Tax Bill Will Include Repeal Of Obamacare Mandate In what is emerging as the latest potential stumbling block for the passage of GOP tax reform, on Tuesday afternoon Senate Majority leader announced that the Senate tax bill will include language to repeal ObamaCare’s individual mandate, a move which could make passage prolematic as it could withdraw support from moderate Republicans. According to The Hill, Conservatives led by GOP Sens. Ted Cruz, Rand Paul and Tom Cotton pushed hard to include the provision, which would eliminate the federal penalty on people who do not buy health insurance.

The move, if passed, *would free up an estimated $300 billion to $400 billion over the next year that could be used to pay for lowering individual and business tax rates even further*.

According to McConnell, adding the individual mandate repeal would make it easier to muster 50 votes to pass the bill, although many others disagree. “We’re optimistic that inserting the individual mandate repeal would be helpful and that’s obviously the view of the Senate Finance Committee Republicans as well,” McConnell said.

Allaying concerns that the revision would lead to a dealbreaker, Senator John Thune, the Senate's No. 3 Republican, told reporters there has been a whip count and he is confident Republicans can pass a tax bill that includes a measure to repeal the mandate.



Thune said the Alexander-Murray bill, aimed at stabilizing markets, would be brought up separately. That bill funds key payments to insurers for two years in exchange for more flexibility for states to change ObamaCare rules.

 

“I’m pleased the Senate Finance Committee has accepted my proposal to repeal the Obamacare individual mandate in the tax legislation," Cotton said in a statement. "Repealing the mandate pays for more tax cuts for working families and protects them from being fined by the IRS for not being able to afford insurance that Obamacare made unaffordable in the first place. I urge the House to include the mandate repeal in their tax legislation."



Republican members of the Senate Finance Committee had met Monday night to discuss the repeal issue, Republican aides told The Hill. The full Senate GOP caucus discussed the idea at its lunch meeting on Tuesday.

Sen. John Kennedy (R-La.) said the bulk of the GOP's policy luncheon Tuesday was focused on repealing the individual mandate through tax reform. While he admitted that the decision wasn't unanimous, he said that no one threatened to vote against tax reform if it were included.

"This is totally different from health care. Nobody was standing up saying 'if you do this, I'm not going to vote for the bill.' There's none of that. Everybody wants to get to yes," he said. Still, it's a risky gambit if it alienates more than just 3 moderate republicans as it would make the bill's passage impossible.

Kennedy said the savings could "give relief to those middle and upper middle tax payers who are not getting as much relief as they should" because of the bill's elimination of state and local tax deductions.

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Meanwhile, in a note released earlier Tuesday, Goldman's economist team said that tax reform debate is moving forward faster than Goldman, or most other observers expected, *and as a result the bank boosted its odds that tax reform will be enacted by early 2018 to 80% from 65%. *Even so Goldman said it still sees challenges that may slow or stop bill, including push-back from affected industries, narrow vote margin in the Senate, keeping cost under $1.5trillion limit, although it said that recent positive developments appear to outweigh those risks. It was not clear how Goldman feels about including Individual mandate repeal as part of the Senate bill. Reported by Zero Hedge 5 hours ago.

Senate GOP intent on scrapping health mandate in tax bill

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Senate Republicans are intent on scrapping the Affordable Care Act's requirement that Americans get health insurance,... Reported by Deseret News 1 hour ago.

Republicans stir Obamacare repeal into tax debate

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Senate tax bill will scrap health insurance mandate in bid to woo conservatives Reported by FT.com 5 hours ago.

U.S. Senate Republicans tie tax plan to repeal of Obamacare mandate

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WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and fellow Senate Republicans said on Tuesday their tax-cut plan likely will be amended to include a repeal of an Obamacare rule disliked by conservatives that requires Americans to have health insurance coverage or pay a penalty. Reported by Reuters 3 hours ago.

Mauldin: The Distribution Of Pain

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Mauldin: The Distribution Of Pain Authored by John Mauldin via MauldinEconomics.com,

When you write about economics, you learn very quickly that the economy doesn’t care what you say about it. The forces that drive it are beyond any one person’s comprehension, much less control.

*But at the same time, the economy doesn’t work like a law of nature. Unlike gravity, for instance, the economy responds to human choices and preferences. We influence it, even if we don’t understand exactly how.*

In last week’s “Fragmentation of Society” letter, I wrote about the coming technological changes that will replace many human jobs and disrupt society. *Some of the disruption will be good and necessary. Much of it will be painful, too, and the pain won’t be evenly distributed.*

That is a problem whether you personally feel any pain or not. People don’t like pain and will change their behavior to avoid or relieve it. Like the drowning who desperately seek something to hold onto, they will vote for politicians who say they can relieve that pain, regardless of whether they actually can. And if those who suffer see that you don’t share their pain, they will wonder why not and seek to gain whatever advantage you possess. And then it gets ugly.

That’s not a moral statement but simply a fact-based observation of human nature. Whether we like the facts doesn’t really matter: We have to face them. Presently we are not handling them very well.

We have engineered society so that we at the upper end of the financial spectrum have little interaction with or knowledge of the people who feel the most pain. I wrote about this chasm between classes last year (see “Life on the Edge”) as the US elections made the split in our nation harder to ignore.

Peggy Noonan talks about the “Protected” class that makes public policy and the “Unprotected” who must live with those policies. The gulf between those classes continues to widen. The changes I wrote about last week will probably make it worse over the next 10–15 years.

*Today I want to delve a little deeper into this widening split and consider where it may take us. As you’ll see, the possibilities range from “not so bad” to “very, very bad.”*

-*The Two Economies*-

Ray Dalio is no stranger to my readers. The billionaire founder of top hedge fund Bridgewater Associates got where he is by having keen insight into both human nature and economic trends. Occasionally he shares some of his wisdom publicly. I featured his reflections on the then-forthcoming Trump presidency in Outside the Box last December.

Last month Dalio posted a new article, “The Two Economies: The Top 40% and the Bottom 60%.” He believes it is a serious mistake to think you can analyze or understand “the” economy because we now have two of them.* The wealth and income levels are so skewed between top and bottom that “average” indicators no longer reflect the average person’s experience or living conditions.*

Dalio launches with this chart:

*The red line is the share of US wealth owned by the bottom 90% of the population, and the green line is the share held by the top 0.1%. *Right now they are about the same, but notice the trend. The wealthiest 0.1% has been increasing its share of wealth since the 1980s, while the bottom 90% has been losing ground.

Looking back, we see a similar pattern in the 1920s – which dramatically reversed in the following decade. Then there was an almost 50-year period during which the masses gained wealth and the wealthy lost ground.

(Important note: This doesn’t mean the 0.1% ceased being wealthy. It just means they owned a smaller portion of the total wealth. An economy in which 0.1% of the people own 10% of the wealth is still skewed, just less so. But more on that later.)

In the big picture, we see about a half-century when the net wealth gap widened in favor of the bottom 90%, followed by another 30 or so years in which the wealthiest gained ground while most of the population lost it.

*It’s not a coincidence that populism emerged as a political force in both the 1920s–1930s and the 2010s.* In each case, people at the bottom could tell the economy wasn’t working in their favor. The best tool they had to do something about it was the vote, so they elected FDR then and Trump now – two very different presidents but both responsive to the most intensely angered voters of their eras.

*That previous, roughly 10-year period in which the green line was above the red line included the Roaring 20s, the 1929 market crash, and the first part of the Great Depression. For the 0.1%’s share of the wealth, 1929 was roughly the high point. Wealth lost in the crash sent their share plummeting. It has not fully recovered to this day, but it’s getting close.*

Thinking about this situation, I can’t help but correlate it to my friend Neil Howe’s idea of a historical “Fourth Turning” every 80 years or so. It fits well with Dalio’s data. Neil said at my 2016 Strategic Investment Conference in Dallas that we are in the middle stages of that Fourth Turning, and he expects conditions to worsen from here. He repeated that warning this year at SIC in Orlando. As he points out, for almost 500 years the last half of Fourth Turning has always encompassed the most tumultuous times in Anglo-Saxon history.

(A Fourth Turning is a time when society’s foundational institutions are challenged. The generation who are young adults at that time must face the challenge, and hopefully overcome it. The so-called Greatest Generation did so by persevering through the Great Depression and fighting World War II. It may not be a war, but the Millennial Generation will face a similar test.)

Back to Dalio’s article. He goes on to quantify the 60/40 split with some startling numbers. Just a sampling:

· The average household in the top 40% earns four times more than the average household in the bottom 60%.
· Real incomes for the bottom 60% have been either flat or down slightly since 1980.
· In 1980, the average top 40% household had six times more wealth than the average bottom-60% household. Now it is 10 times as much.
· Only about a third of the bottom 60% saves any of their income.

*Dalio also found some very useful data I had never seen before: household income adjusted to show the impact of taxes, tax credits, and government benefits. This adjustment gets closer to the resources people actually have available for living expenses, savings, and investment.*

Splitting that data by the top 40% and bottom 60%, we see a sharply growing difference in the percentage changes since 1980. The top saw its after-tax net household income grow almost three times faster than household income for the bottom 60%, even including government transfer payments.

And note something in the right-hand side of the chart, which depicts income changes for the bottom 60% only, divided into three segments.* There is a significant difference in the income growth of the middle 40–60% segment and the bottom 40%, too, and that difference accelerated during and after the Great Recession. *Think about that in the context of recent political trends.

You see the problem here? The bottom 60% know their own experience. Thanks to the Internet and social media, the bottom 40% are particularly aware of it and increasingly resentful.

Note also that the lower ranks of the top 40% are not “wealthy” by any stretch. Anyone below the 80^th percentile is probably struggling to some degree.

Since the 1980s most of us at the top have believed that a rising tide would lift all boats. We were half-right: It has lifted all the boats but not at the same rate, and a good many boats have sprung holes and are taking on water. We’re now near the point where our differences in income and wealth are too great to ignore.

Think back 30 years. None of us would want to go back and live with that same technological base. All of our lives have dramatically improved. From health care to communications to entertainment to transportation and a host of other things, we are all better off.

*But the key here is that no matter how much better our lives have become, those in the bottom 20 or 40 or 60 or 80% notice the relative differences between where they are and where the top 10% or 1% reside, and they can see those differences growing.*

While the majority of those living in Africa, in some parts of Asia, and in the slums in Latin America would see the lives of what we call the poor in America as vastly superior to their own lifestyles, that is not who the bottom 20–40–60% of the income strata in the US are comparing their lives to. It is simply human nature that we compare ourselves to those who have more, and that we want more for ourselves.

-*Leveraged Stress*-

*Last week the American Psychological Association released the results of its latest “Stress in America” survey. Not surprisingly, it revealed we are not happy campers.*

A big majority (59%) think we are now at “the lowest point in our nation’s history.” To me, that seems a stretch, given that we killed each other in staggering numbers in the Civil War. And the 1820s was not a decade of great civility either. But then, people didn’t watch the fighting on their phones. Now we do, and it fills us with anxiety.

I look back on my youth and realize that the late ’60s was the first time when the reality of war confronted my generation in our homes, on our TVs and in our newspapers, every day. What we experienced with media coverage of social turmoil in that era was a harbinger of what the internet and social media have created today: instantaneous analysis of almost everything. Now, social media have become a monstrous breeding ground for conspiracy theories of all kinds. It is most disheartening.

*The specific issues that worry people are interesting:*

*First on the list is health care, by a pretty wide margin. *That concern can cover a lot of territory. Maybe you or a family member are seriously ill, or maybe your health is fine but buying insurance causes financial stress.

Just over a third of respondents reported that the economy causes them stress. That seems a little low, but I remind myself that most people don’t observe the economy the way I do. “High taxes” are well down the list, at 28%. That’s surprising but probably reflects the fact that a small number of people pay most of the income taxes.

*“Unemployment and low wages” is also near the bottom with 22% of respondents stressed about it.* Maybe that figure reflects today’s low unemployment level, or maybe people are just glad to have any sort of job.

One source of considerable stress that isn’t on the list but probably should be is household debt. I talk a lot about government debt and pension debt, but for most people the more immediate concern is probably their mortgage, auto, credit-card, and student loan debt. There is a mountain of it.

*Here’s an interesting Deutsche Bank chart on that point:*

*We see here household leverage ratios spanning 1992–2016, broken down by income quintiles. Focus your attention on the 1992 (darker blue) and 2016 (rightmost black) bars. In that 24-year interval, leverage more than doubled for the lowest-income 20% and rose significantly for the lower-income 80% of the population. It dropped slightly for the 80–89.9^th percentiles and even more for the top 10% income group.*

Now recall Dalio’s data on household income, adjusted for taxes and benefits. The top 20%, whose incomes grew the fastest, managed to reduce their leverage. The lower groups, whose income was up slightly or flat, added large amounts of debt, with the poorest adding the most, percentagewise.

This data doesn’t tell us what specific kinds of debt create these leverage ratios. Maybe some of the debt is productive, like mortgages on reasonably valued homes or student debt that helps borrowers eventually raise their incomes. But I’d bet much of the money that was borrowed is simply gone with little or nothing to show for it.

*This likely-unrecoverable debt also appears as an asset on some lender’s balance sheet. It ends up being sold as asset-backed securities, possibly to a mutual fund or pension fund near you. And it’s generally in the high-yield category, with leverage on it.*

At the risk of repeating the obvious, debt that can’t be repaid won’t be. Somebody will eat the loss; the only question is who. Banks managed to socialize much of their losses in the last recession. I’m not sure that plan will work a second time.

*I started off talking about pain and how we distribute it. It may not be physical pain. Financial and employment-related pain are very real. Boredom, too, can be painful, as can loneliness or the feeling that no one needs you. We’re on the verge of many medical breakthroughs, but we won’t cure every disease or heal every kind of wound. People will still suffer, and it’s clear we need a lot of societal as well as personal healing.*

-*One Nation, Two Labor Markets*-

In a recent column on Bloomberg, Jeanna Smialek and Greg Quinn write:

Goldman Sachs economists agree with Bridgewater Associates’ Ray Dalio: The U.S. economy is running at two speeds.

Headline joblessness may be at a more than 16-year low, but that bullish trend obscures the fact that the labor market is split into two “quite different stories,” Goldman Sachs economists write. A pool of would-be workers remain on the sidelines, and there are reasons to think they can be pulled back into the game. The share of discouraged workers has shrunk, and people are even coming back into jobs from disability. If the labor market gets as hot as it was back in 1999–2000, the economists think participation could climb by a few tenths of a percentage point.

That conclusion is important. Goldman had been skeptical that a tight labor market could push up participation, so this marks a shift in their thinking. If the Fed concurs, it leaves the central bank with a tough choice: should the rate-setting Federal Open Market Committee run the economy hot to attract disenfranchised workers, even if that risks overshooting on inflation amid low headline unemployment? “The FOMC seems to find this trade-off unappealing and is likely to continue to tighten steadily as a result,’’ the economists write. 

*While the Goldman analysis focuses on the labor market split, Dalio pointed out that aggregate statistics mask a division in labor, retirement savings, health care and wealth building. The common theme is that uneven outcomes mean the Fed must take underlying details into account when assessing economic progress. *

-*Working Class Versus Service Class*-

*One final thought, which we will be revisiting in detail in future letters as we think about the future of work. We have had this notion of the “working class.” These are the people who do not own the businesses and are not professionals in the sense of being doctors or lawyers or accountants.*

I have spent a great deal of time thinking about the future of work. It is the single most difficult chapter to write in my upcoming book, partly because I don’t like the conclusions I’m coming to. One of the things I am realizing is that there is a distinction between what we have seen as the working class and what I am coming to see as the service class. A working-class person is somebody who has a trade, and because of their skill, they can generally command a decent income.

*Then there is the service class – bar and restaurant workers, retail salespeople, general manual laborers, and so on. These jobs are almost plug-and-play.* It is not that the greedy restaurant owner doesn’t want to pay his staff more; it’s that competition generally won’t let him do so and still make a profit. So he holds his labor costs down; and he can do so, because in today’s market there are typically more people available for jobs than there are jobs. And because of the Obamacare mandate, if you are a business with more than 50 employees, you simply cannot afford to have full-time employees; so you resort more and more to part-time positions, which do not allow a worker to earn an adequate wage.

Health care being number one of the worry list? I think a large part of that is the fact that young people are required to buy ridiculously expensive health insurance packages in order to subsidize a sick elderly population. And if you’re making $10–$12 an hour working two part-time jobs, trying to figure out how to hold onto a place to live, eat, have adequate clothing, and a bit for entertainment, you’re just not able to spend $400–$600 a month on health care. And then you find out that your taxes are much higher than you thought they would be because now you have to pay the penalty for not having health insurance. Yes, that might stress me out, too.

And yes, I do know young people in exactly that situation. Several of my children literally cannot afford to buy health care, so dad does it for them. But many other friends don’t have parents who can buy them what is essentially ridiculously expensive health care, because the parents are struggling with their own healthcare costs.

*We are a nation that is increasingly under stress. *Dalio talks about it in terms of the bottom 60% versus the top 40%, but he could have made the same case using an 80–20 model or even a 90–10 model. I am reminded of Pareto’s 80/20 principle, which states that roughly 80% of effects come from 20% of causes.

*Our socioeconomic situation is not going to get better, not for a long time.* Let’s assume, wildly optimistically, that the US economy and the rest of the developed world grow at a 5% nominal rate for the next 15 years, so that our economies roughly double. Does that mean that the gap between the lower 60% and the upper 40% will be even wider? We will have more than a few people who will be worth more than $100 billion, that’s for sure.

Will the lives of those in the lower 60% be significantly better than they are today? Absolutely. They’ll have improved health care and health spans (if they have access to health care), lower food costs, far more access to services, etc., but the relative differences will be even greater between the top and the bottom.

*Unless we somehow figure out how to help people deal with their stress and better manage the yawning differences in incomes and outcomes, we’re going to see increasing tension and fragmentation in our society.*

*  *  *

*Like what you’re reading? *Subscribe now and receive the full version of John Mauldin's *Thoughts from the Frontline* delivered to your inbox each week. Reported by Zero Hedge 4 hours ago.

Senate Republicans tie tax plan to repeal of Obamacare mandate

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WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and fellow Senate Republicans said on Tuesday their tax-cut plan likely will be amended to include a repeal of an Obamacare rule disliked by conservatives that requires Americans to have health insurance coverage or pay a penalty. Reported by Reuters 2 hours ago.

Business Highlights

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___ Senate GOP insisting on Obamacare repeal for tax overhaul WASHINGTON (AP) — Senate Republicans said Tuesday they are intent on a repeal of the Obama health care law requirement that Americans get health insurance, as a way to pay for cuts in corporate taxes and individual rates. The surprise renewal of the failed effort to repeal the law's mandate came a day after President Donald Trump renewed pressure on GOP lawmakers to include the repeal in their tax overhaul legislation. ____ US oil and gas 'resurgence' expected as global demand grows LONDON (AP) — A global energy watchdog says it expects the U.S. Reported by SeattlePI.com 3 hours ago.

Health insurance tax hike pushes 200,000 people from private cover to NHS, research finds

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Insurance Premium Tax which is levied on some types of policies, including health insurance, has doubled to 12 per cent since 2015 Reported by Independent 1 hour ago.

Senate GOP Adds Health-Care Twist to Tax Overhaul Plan

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Senate Republicans said they would attach a provision to their tax overhaul plan that would repeal a mandate that all Americans have health insurance, a new twist in the GOP lawmakers’ efforts to rewrite much of the U.S. tax code. Reported by Wall Street Journal 36 seconds ago.

Senate GOP Adds Health-Care Twist to Tax Overhaul Plan

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Senate Republicans attached a provision to their tax overhaul that would repeal the requirement that all Americans have health insurance, a new twist in the GOP lawmakers’ efforts to rewrite much of the U.S. tax code. Reported by Wall Street Journal 13 hours ago.

Senate Republicans released major changes to their tax plan that would make your tax cut temporary

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Senate Republicans released major changes to their tax plan that would make your tax cut temporary **

· *Senate Republicans released modifications to their massive tax bill on Tuesday night.*
· *The biggest proposed change: Individual tax cuts would sunset after 2025.*
· *The bill would also repeal Obamacare's individual mandate.*

--------------------Senate Republicans released a massive heap of changes to their tax bill Tuesday night, including tweaks to proposed individual tax cuts, how start-up employees get paid, and more.

Republican Sen. Orrin Hatch, the chair of the Senate Finance Committee, released a new version of the legislation that, significantly, would sunset individual tax cuts after 2025. That would mean the new tax proposed tax cuts for Americans would end in 2026, after which the tax brackets would revert to the current levels absent new legislation from Congress.

Other changes to the individual side of taxes, like the repeal of the alternative minimum tax and the increased standard deduction, would also expire after 2025.

While the individual changes would be temporary, the corporate tax rate cut would be permanent in the bill. Hatch said in a statement accompanying the updated bill that the bill aims to provide certainty for American businesses.

"Additionally, the modified mark creates more permanence in our tax system so that American job creators can invest in the long term, grow their business and create new jobs," Hatch said.

*Obamacare individual mandate changes and more*

The legislation also would repeal the Affordable Care Act's individual mandate, eliminating the tax for not carrying health insurance. According to the Congressional Budget Office, the move would the federal deficit by $338 billion over 10 years. It would also cause a serious shakeup in the individual insurance market, leaving a projected 13 million more people without health coverage in 2027 compared to the current system, according to the CBO.

The provisions to make the individual tax cuts temporary and the Obamacare mandate repeal will surely be met with tough resistance from Democrats. They could even complicate the math for Republicans to get the 50 votes they need on the bill.

Here's a rundown of some of the other major changes in the updated Senate legislation:

· *Adjustments to individual tax brackets: *The updated bill slightly adjusts the income levels for each tax bracket, though all of these changes would sunset after 2025. The new brackets are:

· 10%: $0 to $9,525 of taxable income for an individual; $0 to $19,050 for married joint filers
· 12%: $9,526 to $38,700 individual; $19,051 to $77,400 joint
· 22%: $38,701 to $70,000 individual; $77,401 to $140,000 joint (was 22.5% in original Senate bill)
· 24%: $70,001 to $160,000 individual; $140,001 to $320,000 joint (was 25% in original Senate bill)
· 32%: $170,001 to $200,000 individual; $320,001 to $400,000 joint (was 32.5% in the original Senate bill)
· 35%: $200,001 to $500,000 individual; $400,001 to $1,000,000 joint
· 38.5%: over $500,000 individual; over $1,000,000 joint

· *Increasing the size of the child tax credit:* The new credit would be $2,000 per child, up from $1,650 in the original Senate bill and the current $1,000. This came amid a push from Sens. Marco Rubio and Mike Lee, both Republicans.
· *Elimination of changes from the original bill to stock compensation:* The original Senate bill included a provision that would have taxed employee stock options when they vested instead of when they were exercised. That proposal is no longer included the updated version of the bill after an uproar from Silicon Valley, where stock-based compensation is popular.
· *Easing restrictions on pass-through income:* The Senate bill has a 17.4% deduction for income made from a pass-through entity, in which the owner of the company books the firm's profits as their own income. The new update includes changes to loosen the requirements to qualify for the deduction.

*SEE ALSO: The Republican tax bill could force billions of dollars in cuts to programs like Medicare*

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Senator Bob Corker slams Trump and says he has 'great difficulty with the truth' Reported by Business Insider 12 hours ago.

Bestow Gives Texas Residents First Access to On-Demand Life Insurance

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Insurtech startup launches the first full-stack, digital life insurance product, integrating data and technology.

DALLAS (PRWEB) November 15, 2017

Bestow Inc., the company behind a revolutionary new approach to life insurance, today announced the early access roll out of its comprehensive, full-stack, digital life insurance solution in Texas. For the first time Bestow’s solution is available to the public, giving Texas residents primary access to apply for the only on-demand life insurance solution, instantly and without a medical exam.

“Before, the old life insurance model was a time consuming and often confusing process. We’ve developed a method that combines machine learning, data, and technology to easily and instantly determine top-rated, affordable coverage,” said Melbourne O’Banion, co-founder and CEO of Bestow. “From beginning to end, we’ve designed the experience and products to be easy to understand, fast to obtain and a quality, affordable solution for millions of families.”

Leveraging applied intelligence and algorithmic underwriting, Bestow redefines the way consumers research, buy and manage life insurance. Using data to calculate risk, Bestow removes the need for a medical exam and streamlines the entire process into a matter of minutes. The Texas launch gives consumers access to choice term life insurance plans, including a unique two year term policy never before available for life insurance. Additionally, customers can choose between ten or twenty year term life insurance.

“Texas is our home state, which is why we wanted to give Texas residents priority access to life insurance solutions that best suit their lifestyle,” said Jonathan Abelmann, co-founder and President of Bestow. “It’s important for us to give our community an amazing experience and understand their needs and wants at our initial launch.”

For customers interested in Bestow’s life insurance offerings, the company is offering two months of complimentary coverage. Bestow is backed by two of the most trusted names in the insurance industry, North American Company for Life and Health Insurance®, an A+ rated carrier in the United States and member company of Sammons® Financial Group, and Munich American Reassurance Company, the U.S. life and disability reinsurance division of the leading global reinsurer Munich Re. Bestow will soon open for enrollment nationally.

For more information about Bestow and early enrollment access, visit https://prelaunch.hellobestow.com.

About Bestow:
Bestow is revolutionizing the approach to life insurance, helping this generation protect its financial future. Bestow is the first comprehensive full stack digital life insurance solution. The company provides simple products, algorithmic underwriting, and data-driven financial solutions in a bundled, streamlined user experience. For more information about Bestow, please visit https://www.hellobestow.com/. Reported by PRWeb 12 hours ago.

ACA mandate repeal tucked into tax bill

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The Senate's version of a tax reform bill will include a provision to repeal the individual mandate in the Affordable Care Act, The Hill reports. By repealing the mandate, there would no longer be an incentive or penalty for people to buy insurance on the individual market. Over the next 10 years, it would save the federal government $338 billion (by paying out fewer subsidies) but decrease the number of people with health insurance by 13 million as healthy people drop out of the marketplace the… Reported by bizjournals 11 hours ago.

Largest office lease of year signed for Rancho Cordova buildings

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A health insurance company has signed what's believed to be the largest office lease in the region this year, a brokerage involved in the transaction announced Tuesday. Reported by bizjournals 11 hours ago.

Nearly 1.5 million people signed up for Obamacare plans so far: CMS

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WASHINGTON (Reuters) - More than 800,000 people signed up for Obamacare individual health insurance plans in the second week of open enrollment, the U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services said on Wednesday, bringing the total number of sign-ups to nearly 1.5 million so far. Reported by Reuters 10 hours ago.

Majority of Hardcore NFL Fans Disapprove of Roger Goodell’s Handling of Anthem Protests

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Hardcore NFL fans strongly disapprove of how embattled NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell has handled his job and a gigantic 77 percent of fans think players should stand for the national anthem. As Goodell attempts to secure a new contract reportedly worth close to $50 million per year with lifetime health insurance for his family as well […] Reported by Mediaite 9 hours ago.

Nearly 1.5 million people signed up for Obamacare plans so far: officials

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WASHINGTON (Reuters) - More than 800,000 people signed up for Obamacare individual health insurance plans in the second week of open enrollment, U.S. government health officials said on Wednesday, bringing the total number of sign-ups to nearly 1.5 million so far. Reported by Reuters 9 hours ago.

The Latest: Hatch defends 'Obamacare' repeal in tax bill

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WASHINGTON (AP) — The Latest on the Republican tax overhaul legislation (all times local): 11 a.m. The head of the Senate's tax-writing committee is defending the decision to include in the tax bill a repeal of the Obamacare requirement for Americans to get health insurance. Republican Sen. Orrin Hatch, the chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, said Wednesday the requirement that nearly everyone have insurance coverage or face a fine is a tax. Hatch said that's a "terribly regressive tax that imposes harsh burdens on low- and middle-income taxpayers." His panel started a third day of work Wednesday on the tax overhaul legislation. Democrats angrily protested the move. Reported by SeattlePI.com 10 hours ago.

Senate adds repeal of health care mandate to tax bill

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Senate Republicans are including in their tax bill a repeal of the Affordable Care Act's mandate of health insurance for most -More-  Reported by SmartBrief 9 hours ago.

Hatch Defends 'Obamacare' Repeal in Tax Bill

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The head of the Senate's tax-writing committee is defending the decision to include in the tax bill a repeal of the Obamacare requirement for Americans to get health insurance. Reported by Newsmax 6 hours ago.
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