HomePoliticsTax reform spurs ‘Eds and Meds’ to hasten bond-backed plans

Tax reform spurs ‘Eds and Meds’ to hasten bond-backed plans

With Republican tax reform proposals looming, health and educational institutions in New Jersey are scrambling to push through projects that rely on bond issuances.

In both the plan that passed the U.S. House of Representatives last week and the current U.S. Senate version, taxation of a variety of bonds would change.

Of significance to New Jersey’s “Eds and Meds” industries — since both are majority tax-exempt — is the change in tax exemption for bonds issued for capital improvement projects, or for debt consolidation from mergers, which could result in organizations paying higher interest rates.

Scott Kobler, a partner at McCarter & English, said he has clients scurrying to push through projects before the end of the year — with the state’s cooperation — and concerned about the ability to purchase new equipment in the near future.

“Hospitals and colleges will likely see their cost of borrowing will go up, and that will probably mean less capital investment and/or higher costs passed through to consumers, tuition payers, health insurers and patients, in order to do what projects they need to do,” Kobler said.

It might also increase their debt burden or affect their credit.

The other well-known provision that could be harmful to the health industry, in the Senate version, is the repeal of the individual mandate of the Affordable Care Act.

This, according to KPMG’s John Gimigliano, is the equivalent of an accounting trick.

Since the bill is being advanced through the budget reconciliation process, which requires only 51 “yes” votes for it pass, there is a burden to ensure the bill doesn’t increase the federal deficit for a 10-year term.

The wording of the repeal is less an erasure of the mandate than changing the penalty to $0, Gimigliano said.

“It may be a little counterintuitive, but, by doing that, it raised quite a bit of revenue — over $300 billion — and, by putting that in the bill, they gave themselves additional revenue to make the numbers of tax reform work.”

So, the change in the mandate would offset areas where taxes have been increased, thereby creating the balance.

This is exactly the kind of move that the health care industry had been trying to block earlier this year, because both providers and insurers have benefited from the mandate. Providers have seen an increase in patient volume and insurers have more stabilized risk pools that can help lower the cost of insurance.

“You’re looking at Thanksgiving, the end of the year, historically a bumpy time of the year in which to do something,” he said. “Some bigger systems may be able to weather this better, but it will definitely have an effect on the capital markets — it’s a far more wide-reaching impact. But, there is so much stuff in this bill no one knows what its effect is going to wind up being.”

Related Articles

Mercury Public Affairs promotes Melli to partner

Mercury Public Affairs announced March 16 that Juan Melli has been promoted to partner in the firm's New Jersey office. Melli joined Mercury's New Jersey...

Bills addressing energy demand from AI data centers clear committee

The Senate Environment and Energy Committee advanced two pieces of legislation sponsored by state Sen. Bob Smith that will address rising energy demand from...

Atlantic City honors small business owners, awards $900K in micro grants

The City of Atlantic City celebrated the success of its recent Small Business Micro-Grant Program with a reception on March 12, honoring the recipients...

State Treasury says major revenues were down in February, citing early start on Tax Year 2025 refund processing

The state Department of the Treasury reported March 13 that February revenue collections for the major taxes totaled $3.091 billion, down $89.4 million, or...

First track on new Portal North Bridge to enter service March 16

This story has an update: New Portal Bridge used ahead of schedule as delays impact NJ Transit riders NJ Transit and Amtrak said the first...

Appeals court says Trump administration must continue Hudson Tunnel payments

The Trump administration has lost another round in court Wednesday over funding for the Hudson Tunnel project, with a federal appeals court turning aside...

Latest Articles

William Paterson University to expand MaCS Program with $2M grant from NSF

William Paterson University has been awarded a $2 million, six-year grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF) to continue and expand its Mathematics and...

Cushman & Wakefield arranges $56M construction loan for industrial development in Rahway

Cushman & Wakefield on March 16 announced that it has arranged a $56 million construction loan on behalf of Sagard Real Estate and Woodmont...

Wipro partners with Harness to accelerate AI-native software delivery

Wipro Limited, a leading AI-powered technology services and consulting company with a U.S. office in New Brunswick, and Harness, the AI Software Delivery Platform...

ACG New Jersey names 2026 Corporate Growth Awards honorees, taps Eric LeGrand

The Association for Corporate Growth New Jersey has announced the honorees for its 2026 Corporate Growth Awards, recognizing middle-market companies headquartered in New Jersey...
00:03:40

Steve Adubato’s Lessons in Leadership: Bill Noonan, chief business development officer, Choose NJ

As part of the Lessons in Leadership special series, “This is New Jersey,” Steve Adubato and Mary Gamba are joined by Bill Noonan, chief...

Astound names fiber executive Brandt CEO

Princeton-based Astound, a leader in Wi-Fi, mobile, TV and fiber‑optic solutions, announced that Ettienne Brandt has joined the company as chief executive officer, effective...

Latest Articles

William Paterson University to expand MaCS Program with $2M grant from NSF

William Paterson University has been awarded a $2 million, six-year grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF) to continue and expand its Mathematics and...

Cushman & Wakefield arranges $56M construction loan for industrial development in Rahway

Cushman & Wakefield on March 16 announced that it has arranged a $56 million construction loan on behalf of Sagard Real Estate and Woodmont...

Wipro partners with Harness to accelerate AI-native software delivery

Wipro Limited, a leading AI-powered technology services and consulting company with a U.S. office in New Brunswick, and Harness, the AI Software Delivery Platform...

ACG New Jersey names 2026 Corporate Growth Awards honorees, taps Eric LeGrand

The Association for Corporate Growth New Jersey has announced the honorees for its 2026 Corporate Growth Awards, recognizing middle-market companies headquartered in New Jersey...

Steve Adubato’s Lessons in Leadership: Bill Noonan, chief business development officer, Choose NJ

As part of the Lessons in Leadership special series, “This is New Jersey,” Steve Adubato and Mary Gamba are joined by Bill Noonan, chief...