It appears that Medtronic (NYSE: MDT) is assuming that all the efforts to repeal the medical device tax are not going to amount to much and that companies will have to pay it.
In a conference call with analysts Tuesday morning to discussMedtronic’s quarterly earnings, Goldman Sachs analyst David Roman asked details about the impact of the medical device tax given that Medtronic would be the first company including its effect in its financial guidance for fiscal 2013, which ends at the end of April next year. In response, CFO Gary Ellis said that the net impact of the tax will probably be between $125 million to $175 million per year after taxes.
“So you can assume that in FY2013 it could be about $40 million to$60 million impact,” Ellis said.
He added that there is still only draft regulation on this but the company is assuming that this is a cost it has to cover in the future.
“It’s just going to be a cost of doing business here in the U.S. and we are going to have to make the trade-offs,” he said. “There’s probably going to be things that we can’t do as a result of that, but our assumption is that this is a cost we are going to have to cover.”
He noted that Medtronic is also looking at how much of the cost, if any, can be passed on. That might be a far trickier question given how cost-sensitive hospitals have become in the U.S.
The U.S. government is looking to collect $20 billion over a decade by levying a 2.3 percent excise tax on medical device companies.

Reserve your seat now for MedCity CONVERGE, to be held July 9-10 in Philadelphia. Discover strategies, solutions and startups in healthcare innovation. Be a part of this gathering where the entire healthcare ecosystem converges.
By Arundhati Parmar
Arundhati Parmar is the Medical Devices Reporter at MedCity News. She has covered medical technology since 2008 and specialized in business journalism since 2001. Parmar has three degrees from three continents - a Bachelor of Arts in English from Jadavpur University, Kolkata, India; a Masters in English Literature from the University of Sydney, Australia and a Masters in Journalism from Northwestern University in Chicago. She has sworn never to enter a classroom again.More posts by Author










