Smart Trading Field
  • Politics
  • Investing
  • Tech News
  • Stock
  • Editor’s Pick
Investing

Trump’s Fertility-Treatment Proposal and the Messy World of Health Care, Regulation & Taxes

by May 12, 2026
by May 12, 2026 0 comment

Michael F. Cannon

Fertility-Family.jpg

President Trump’s proposal to treat employer-paid fertility treatments as a “limited excepted benefit” is good, to the extent it would exempt those arrangements from various federal regulations. Under the proposal, large employers could, for example, offer fertility-treatment coverage with higher cost-sharing and lower annual and lifetime coverage limits than federal law otherwise allows. Employers would therefore have more flexibility to offer the treatments workers prefer, often at a lower premium.

At the same time, the proposal doesn’t exactly give workers more control over their lives or health care. Congress creates federal income and payroll taxes, then excludes income in the form of employer-sponsored health insurance from both. The result is that the government effectively penalizes workers for every dollar of income they don’t (1) let their employer control and (2) spend on health insurance. To the extent the proposed rule would deregulate employer-purchased fertility-treatment coverage, it would allow more such arrangements to qualify for that tax exclusion. For every $1 of tax savings workers enjoy, however, they must sacrifice control of $3 of their earnings to an employer. 

So while this is a deregulatory proposal, and it would result in tax savings for some workers, it’s not much of a win for liberty, consumer sovereignty, or free markets.

Not unrelated to that disappointing conclusion is this gem from the proposed rule:

“… the expansion of pre-tax benefits decreases overall tax receipts, constituting a transfer from the government to individuals and employers.”

That assertion holds only if all income belongs to the government, even income it never collects. If the worker never gives that $1 to the government in the first place, however, it means that a transfer is not taking place between the two. (Yes, the tax code implicitly subsidizes ESI. But the subsidy does not necessarily equal the $1 tax savings; it is an indeterminate portion of the aforementioned $3. Even if implicit subsidy exactly equals the $1 of tax savings, that $1 does not “transfer from the government to individuals and employers.”) 

The rhetoric of “tax expenditures” claims another logical casualty.

0 comment
0
FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

previous post
Lawmaker Wants Jurors Kept in the Dark—and She’s Conditioning Federal Funds Upon It
next post
President Trump Can Stop Racial Profiling Immediately

You may also like

Election Policy Roundup #24: All About Redistricting

May 12, 2026

President Trump’s Approval on Inflation Is Now Worse...

May 12, 2026

Educational Freedom and a Brighter Future for Every...

May 12, 2026

President Trump Can Stop Racial Profiling Immediately

May 12, 2026

Lawmaker Wants Jurors Kept in the Dark—and She’s...

May 12, 2026

Don’t Pause the Gas Tax—Repeal It

May 11, 2026

28.7 Million Reports, 275 Investigations—the Bank Secrecy Act...

May 11, 2026

Reviving Private Prosecution Could Transform Victims’ Rights

May 11, 2026

Can Deregulation of Branch Banking Improve Capital Allocation?...

May 11, 2026

Public Employees Have the Right to Talk Politics...

May 11, 2026

    Sign up for our newsletter to receive the latest insights, updates, and exclusive content straight to your inbox! Whether it's industry news, expert advice, or inspiring stories, we bring you valuable information that you won't find anywhere else. Stay connected with us!


    By opting in you agree to receive emails from us and our affiliates. Your information is secure and your privacy is protected.

    Recent Posts

    • Group flags ‘forced’ teacher participation in ARAL program

      May 11, 2026
    • DOH working with PhilHealth to include liver transplants under Z Benefits package, says Herbosa

      May 11, 2026
    • About us
    • Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions

    Copyright © 2025 smarttradingfield.com | All Rights Reserved

    Smart Trading Field
    • Politics
    • Investing
    • Tech News
    • Stock
    • Editor’s Pick