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CBO score on Senate GOP health bill released, 22M more uninsured relative to ACA

Tovarisc

Member
Edit: For reference it was 23 million more in 2026 relative to ACA under House bill

Senate bill:
  • 2018: 15 million more would be uninsured than under Obamacare
  • 2020: 19 million more
  • 2026: 22 million more
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https://twitter.com/BraddJaffy/status/879435749770264576

xihGtFl.png

https://twitter.com/BraddJaffy/status/879436602833063937
thanks cameron for heads up about this tweet
CBO and JCT estimate that enacting the Better Care Reconciliation Act of 2017 would reduce federal deficits by $321 billion over the coming decade and increase the number of people who are uninsured by 22 million in 2026 relative to current law.

The Congressional Budget Office and the staff of the Joint Committee on Taxation (JCT) have completed an estimate of the direct spending and revenue effects of the Better Care Reconciliation Act of 2017, a Senate amendment in the nature of a substitute to H.R. 1628. CBO and JCT estimate that enacting this legislation would reduce the cumulative federal deficit over the 2017-2026 period by $321 billion. That amount is $202 billion more than the estimated net savings for the version of H.R. 1628 that was passed by the House of Representatives.

The Senate bill would increase the number of people who are uninsured by 22 million in 2026 relative to the number under current law, slightly fewer than the increase in the number of uninsured estimated for the House-passed legislation. By 2026, an estimated 49 million people would be uninsured, compared with 28 million who would lack insurance that year under current law.

Effects on the Federal Budget
CBO and JCT estimate that, over the 2017-2026 period, enacting this legislation would reduce direct spending by $1,022 billion and reduce revenues by $701 billion, for a net reduction of $321 billion in the deficit over that period (see Table 1, at the end of this document):
  • The largest savings would come from reductions in outlays for Medicaid—spending on the program would decline in 2026 by 26 percent in comparison with what CBO projects under current law—and from changes to the Affordable Care Act's (ACA's) subsidies for nongroup health insurance (see Figure 1). Those savings would be partially offset by the effects of other changes to the ACA's provisions dealing with insurance coverage: additional spending designed to reduce premiums and a reduction in revenues from repealing penalties on employers who do not offer insurance and on people who do not purchase insurance.
  • The largest increases in deficits would come from repealing or modifying tax provisions in the ACA that are not directly related to health insurance coverage, including repealing a surtax on net investment income and repealing annual fees imposed on health insurers.
Source: https://www.cbo.gov/publication/52849

Edit:
Premiums: Senate GOP plan vs. current law (via CBO)
https://twitter.com/BraddJaffy/status/879439096921419777

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https://twitter.com/ZekeJMiller/status/879458289888763904

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https://twitter.com/ZekeJMiller/status/879466879911424000
 
"primarily because the penalty for not having insurance would be dropped"

Well, that's all they needed to do, not make someone's cost of living more expensive.
 

Foffy

Banned
Dat normalized terrorism from the GOP.

Said it before, will say it again: ISIS wishes they can cause this much misery.
 
By comparison, under the House's bill (AHCA):
2018: 14 million *more* uninsured
2020: 19 million
2026: 23 million


"same shitburger, different bun", as they say
 

cameron

Member
And

CBO: Enrollment in Medicaid would fall by 16%; 49 million people uninsured under Senate plan in 2016 compared to 28 million under Obamacare

— Bradd Jaffy (@BraddJaffy) June 26, 2017
 

ultron87

Member
They're just gonna argue that the 15 million next year is people choosing to be insurance free so that's fine of course, then 2020 and 2026 are so far away that what does the CBO know anyway? Okay let's get those tax cuts.
 

Boke1879

Member
Dems need to embrace single payer or "medicare for all"

and they need to run on Fixing Ocare.

What the GOP is doing isn't helping at all.
 

Zophar

Member
Dropping 15 million people in a year would be cataclysmic for the health care industry. More than just condemning 15 million people to instability and potentially death, this would also be a recession-making bill. Huge amounts of jobs would be lost, and costs would skyrocket.
 

jiiikoo

Banned
Joshua Holland @JoshuaHol
·
4m

Per CBO, 4 million people would lose *employer-provided* coverage next year under BCRA.Per CBO, 4 million people would lose *employer-provided* coverage next year under BCRA.

So Conway lied? Even having a job doesn't cover you lol.
 

Socivol

Member
Things are going just as they planned I see. I was thinking about ISIS today and I actually fear more for my life of GOP policies than I do of ISIS, a terrorist organization.
 

LakeEarth

Member

Vixdean

Member
Honestly the top line number should be 49 million losing Medicaid. This isn't so much repealing Obamacare as it is destroying Medicaid.
 
At least there was time to fucking come out with a CBO score so this puts up actual real pressure on it. Fucking monsters.

The media did a good job highlighting how everything was being done in secret in the Senate over the past week, thank fucking god.
 
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