In 2010, President Obama signed legislation that significantly altered the healthcare and health insurance markets in the United States. An integral part of that reform is the individual mandate, a provision that requires individuals to purchase and maintain healthcare insurance. Failure to maintain such coverage subjects an individual to a tax penalty. The Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of that provision under Congress’s taxing power. Despite the Supreme Court upholding the individual mandate, fundamental questions remain. This Article addresses the question of whether the use of a tax penalty to encourage taxpayers to do something that the government desires is normatively a bad policy. Many commentators have contended that a ...
Within weeks, after signing the nation’s first comprehensive health insurance reform, twenty states ...
In 2012, ruling on a challenge to President Obama’s landmark healthcare legislation, the Supreme Cou...
The Supreme Court’s “new federalism” decisions impose modest limits on the regulatory authority of C...
In 2010, President Obama signed legislation that significantly altered the healthcare and health ins...
This article, prepared for a symposium at the Salmon P. Chase College of Law, Northern Kentucky Univ...
In this article, Kahn describes the technical operation of omportion portions of the individual heal...
In recent decades, Congress has used the federal income tax system increasingly to administer and de...
The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010 (ACA) includes many changes to the U.S. Feder...
The “Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act” includes what is called an “individual responsibili...
Once President Barack Obama and Democrats in Congress have passed a health care reform bill, conserv...
The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act requires Americans to have or buy health insurance. T...
The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010 (ACA) includes many changes to the U.S. Feder...
This article examines the Supreme Court\u27s 2012 decision in National Federation of Business v. Sib...
Section 1501 of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act added section 5000A to the Internal R...
When Chief Justice John Roberts wrote the opinion of the Court in National Federation of Independent...
Within weeks, after signing the nation’s first comprehensive health insurance reform, twenty states ...
In 2012, ruling on a challenge to President Obama’s landmark healthcare legislation, the Supreme Cou...
The Supreme Court’s “new federalism” decisions impose modest limits on the regulatory authority of C...
In 2010, President Obama signed legislation that significantly altered the healthcare and health ins...
This article, prepared for a symposium at the Salmon P. Chase College of Law, Northern Kentucky Univ...
In this article, Kahn describes the technical operation of omportion portions of the individual heal...
In recent decades, Congress has used the federal income tax system increasingly to administer and de...
The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010 (ACA) includes many changes to the U.S. Feder...
The “Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act” includes what is called an “individual responsibili...
Once President Barack Obama and Democrats in Congress have passed a health care reform bill, conserv...
The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act requires Americans to have or buy health insurance. T...
The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010 (ACA) includes many changes to the U.S. Feder...
This article examines the Supreme Court\u27s 2012 decision in National Federation of Business v. Sib...
Section 1501 of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act added section 5000A to the Internal R...
When Chief Justice John Roberts wrote the opinion of the Court in National Federation of Independent...
Within weeks, after signing the nation’s first comprehensive health insurance reform, twenty states ...
In 2012, ruling on a challenge to President Obama’s landmark healthcare legislation, the Supreme Cou...
The Supreme Court’s “new federalism” decisions impose modest limits on the regulatory authority of C...