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Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law 1994 19(2):393-419; DOI:10.1215/03616878-19-2-393
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Duke University Press

The Divergence of Federal and State Policies on the Charitable Tax Exemption of Nonprofit Hospitals

Margaret A. Potter and Beaufort B. Longest, Jr.
University of Pittsburgh

Nonprofit hospitals have traditionally enjoyed charitable exemption from real estate taxes because they provide specific social benefits. However, in the past three decades, major health policy changes at the federal levelmost significantly, implementation of the Medicare and Medicaid programshave weakened this rationale. Federal tax regulations during this period have changed in ways that complement these federal health programs and the accompanying federal interests in encouraging efficiency and performance uniformity among hospitals. States and local governments, however, have different interests, and these may favor a strict set of tax exemption standards that disregard efficiency and elevate the importance of a measurable level of charitable service. Their divergent policies rest on a fundamental value judgment about whether nonprofit hospital care is intrinsically charitable or not. Increasingly, this judgment may be forced upon state courts and legislation by local governments seeking new tax revenues through the elimination of hospitals' exemption from real estate taxes.




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