Sunday, July 16, 2023

More on Nonprofit Hospitals and Tax-Exempt Status

Just a quick followup on my previous posting on this topic (July 13). On July 15 the New England Journal of Medicine posted an on-line "Perspectives" piece (possibly free) that examines the question whether nonprofit hospitals deserve their tax-exempt status. The article covers much of the same ground as my post, but it adds some data to further the policy discussion, such as:

[I]n previous work we compared nonprofit and for-profit hospitals on measures of charity care and Medicaid shortfalls — the two largest components of community benefit by amount of spending. For-profit hospitals don’t receive tax exemptions and aren’t legally obligated to provide community benefit. In 2018, for every $100 of expenses incurred, nonprofit hospitals in aggregate spent $2.30 on charity care, as compared with $3.80 spent by for-profit hospitals. And in 2019, nonprofit and for-profit hospitals had similar Medicaid shortfalls as a share of total expenses. . . . These data suggest that many nonprofit hospitals don’t provide enough charity care or have a substantial enough Medicaid shortfall (relative to for-profit hospitals) to justify their favorable tax treatment. 

The article continues with additional policy-based concerns and ends with a valuable suggestion:

There are insufficient data to compare the amount of community benefit provided by individual nonprofit hospitals with the subsidies they receive. To close this information gap, the IRS could revise Schedule H of Form 990 to require nonprofit hospitals to report on forgone federal, state, and local taxes (broken out separately); savings associated with using tax-exempt bonds; gross profits from the 340B program, if applicable; and charitable contributions received by the hospital, with standardized reporting for each of these elements. . . .  Disclosure might not be sufficient to catalyze changes in hospital behavior, but we believe greater visibility is a prerequisite for policy action. 

 

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