A Tax Credit Proposal for Profit Moderation and Social Mission Maximization in Long-Term Residential Care Businesses

Author:

Kerlin Janelle A.1ORCID,Ye Meng1ORCID,Chen Wendy2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Public Management and Policy , Georgia State University , 14 Marietta St NW , Suite 356 , , Atlanta , GA , USA

2. Department of Political Science, Texas Tech University , 79409 , Lubbock , TX , USA

Abstract

Abstract This policy brief proposes a tax credit with related qualifying conditions that address the serious deficiencies related to abuse and neglect found in the current for-profit long-term care space. It also seeks to address the lack of government accountability for huge outlays of taxpayer dollars in the form of Medicare and Medicaid payments to these facilities, much of which results in maximizing profits for wealthy investors at the expense of vulnerable individuals with limited voice. Our proposed policy arrangement alters the organizational DNA of the for-profit organization, including the moderation of profit, to circumvent the existing financial incentives that are driving the mistreatment and malpractice so evident in the system. It aims to achieve this through four policy components including social financing, a sliding dividend cap, employee-ownership, and limits on complex corporate structures which are tied to a tax credit. This multi-faceted policy idea is intended to start the discussion around a possible path forward.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Public Administration,Economics and Econometrics,Sociology and Political Science

Reference77 articles.

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3. Benjamin, L. M., and P. L. Posner. 2018. “Tax Expenditures and Accountability: The Case of the Ambivalent Principals.” Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory 28 (4): 569–82. https://doi.org/10.1093/jopart/muy040.

4. Boeger, Nina, Sara Burgess, and Julie Ellison. 2018. “Lessons from the Community Interest Company.” In Shaping the Corporate LandscapeTowards Corporate Reform and Enterprise Diversity, edited by Sara Boeger, and Charlotte Villiers, 347–364. Bloomsbury.

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