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Can the IRS Can Use Liens and Incarceration to Enforce ObamaCare’s Individual Mandate?

"But, money being fungible, the IRS may simply deem my first $1,000 of income-tax withholding to be payment of that penalty," & use all its intimidation power to collect the $1000 or real tax owed. Continue reading

So says Michael Cannon of the Cato Institute:

A recent [Washington Post] article [“Could the health-care law work without the individual mandate?”, Mar. 28, A8] claims the IRS “will be barred from using … collection tools such as placing liens or threatening incarceration” to enforce compliance with the requirement that Americans obtain health insurance. Not so.

Suppose the IRS assesses me a $1,000 penalty for failing to obtain health insurance. It is true that the law prohibits the IRS from using liens or incarceration to collect *that* $1,000. But, money being fungible, the IRS may simply deem my first $1,000 of income-tax withholding to be payment of that penalty. As a result, I would owe an additional $1,000 in *income tax* at the end of the year, and the IRS could come after me with every tool at its disposal, including liens and incarceration.

Yes, I just copied the full text from his post here: Yes, the IRS Can Use Liens and Incarceration to Enforce ObamaCare’s Individual Mandate | Cato @ Liberty.