


Why America’s hospitals don’t want their taxes cut
Congress is taking aim at a gimmick vital to rural health providers
The American Hospital Association (AHA) may be the only trade group in Washington that is lobbying against a proposed tax cut for their members. Congressional Republicans’ One Big Beautiful Bill Act is undergoing late revisions ahead of the Senate’s self-imposed July 4th deadline. A particularly contentious area involves provider taxes: obscure levies raised against hospitals, nursing homes and other medical offices. On the face of it, cutting those taxes sounds like good news for hospitals. But the levies are a financing gimmick used to fund Medicaid, a health programme for the poor, and for funnelling money to hospitals. The AHA’s president warns the tax cuts are so severe they could close rural hospitals.
Explore more
This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline “Please tax us”

Oklahoma City has been reborn, 30 years after the bombing
Basketball is only the beginning

Peace in his time
Has Donald Trump solved Iran from the air?

I came, I bombed Iran
The fallout from Donald Trump’s strike is political, too
Even for $10bn, the Los Angeles Lakers may look like a bargain
A seeming vanity investment is in fact a market-beating asset class
The meaning of Zohran Mamdani’s win in New York
America’s biggest city takes a strange turn
Robert F. Kennedy looks set to mess with vaccines
An influential panel has been stacked with vaccine sceptics and ideologues