What I found more interesting, however, is what the CBO had to say - TopicsExpress



          

What I found more interesting, however, is what the CBO had to say about the Affordable Care Act. Obamacare, as it is commonly known, will cost 20 percent less than previously projected over the next decade, the CBO said Monday. The reason for the revised estimate is a result of a decline of healthcare inflation, the Los Angeles Times reported. In addition, the number of uninsured Americans has fallen by 12 million, the CBO estimates, and an additional 12 million are expected to gain insurance by the end of 2016. Through 2019, the law’s insurance provisions will cost an estimated $571 billion, down $139 billion from the CBO’s initial estimates. One of the more common complaints from the right is that the nation “can’t afford” the ACA. Even if it’s working, even if it’s saving lives, the argument goes, the massive reform law simply carries too large a price tag. That argument cannot be taken seriously. For one thing, “Obamacare” reduces the deficit – repeal it and the shortfall conservatives sometimes pretend to care about gets worse, not better. For another, the price tag keeps shrinking, not growing, making the “we can’t afford it” argument nonsensical. What’s more, the CBO also found that the Affordable Care Act has brought coverage to 12 million Americans – a total that will continue to grow steadily in the coming years – and the uninsured rate is expected to drop to just 8% by the end of President Obama’s tenure. Of course, 8% isn’t 0%, and that would still leave many people in this country without coverage, but according to the CBO, nearly all of those folks would be either undocumented immigrants, ineligible for benefits under the reform law, or low-income families living in red states that refuse to accept Medicaid expansion – a problem the White House cannot solve.
Posted on: Tue, 27 Jan 2015 23:20:02 +0000

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