CBO Misses Its Obamacare Projection By 24 Million People

Submitted by Jeffrey Anderson WeeklyStandard.com,

Three years ago, on the eve of Obamacare’s implementation, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) projected that President Obama’s centerpiece legislation would result in an average of 201 million people having private health insurance in any given month of 2016. Now that 2016 is here, the CBO says that just 177 million people, on average, will have private health insurance in any given month of this year – a shortfall of 24 million people.

 

Indeed, based on the CBO’s own numbers, it seems possible that Obamacare has actually reduced the number of people with private health insurance. In 2013, the CBO projected that, without Obamacare, 186 million people would be covered by private health insurance in 2016—160 million on employer-based plans, 26 million on individually purchased plans. The CBO now says that, with Obamacare, 177 million people will be covered by private health insurance in 2016—155 million on employer-based plans, 12 million on plans bought through Obamacare’s government-run exchanges, and 9 million on other individually purchased plans (plus a rounding error of 1 million).

In other words, it would appear that a net 9 million people have lost their private health plans, thanks to Obamacare—with a net 5 million people having lost employer-based plans and a net 4 million people having lost individually purchased plans.

None of this is to say that fewer people have “coverage” under Obamacare—it’s just not private coverage. In 2013, the CBO projected that 34 million people would be on Medicaid or CHIP (the Children’s Health Insurance Program) in 2016. The CBO now says that 68 million people will be on Medicaid or CHIP in 2016—double its earlier estimate. It turns out that Obamacare is pretty much a giant Medicaid expansion.

To be clear, the CBO—which has very generously labeled Obamacare’s direct subsidies to insurance companies as “tax credits,” even though sending money to insurers doesn’t lower anyone’s taxes—isn’t openly declaring that Obamacare has reduced the number of people with private health insurance or that it has doubled the number of people on Medicaid or CHIP. Rather, the CBO maintains that Obamacare has actually increased the number of people with private health insurance by 9 million and has increased the number of people on Medicaid or CHIP by (just) 13 million. But it would seem that the only reason the CBO can make these claims is that it has moved the goalposts.

That is, the CBO has significantly altered its estimates for what 2016 would have looked like if Obamacare had never been passed. In 2013, the CBO projected that, in the absence of Obamacare, 186 million people would have had private health insurance in 2016, and 34 million people would have been on Medicaid or CHIP. The CBO now maintains that, in the absence of Obamacare, only 168 million people would have had private health insurance in 2016 (a reduction of 18 million people from its 2013 projection), while 55 million people would have been on Medicaid or CHIP (an increase of 21 million people from its 2013 projection). Somehow the hypothetical non-Obamacare world has changed a lot in the past three years. (The CBO doesn’t explain how this could have happened.)

Even the CBO’s revised figures for a non-Obamacare world, however, can’t gloss over the fact that Obamacare has failed to hit its target for private health insurance by 24 million people. To see that, one must simply compare Obamacare’s new tally of 177 million to its 2013 target of 201 million.

The CBO doesn’t release retroactive scoring of Obamacare. Try finding, for example, tallies from the federal government (whether from the CBO or otherwise) on what Obamacare has actually cost so far. Rather, the CBO is like a handicapper who predicts the results of horseraces, but then never bothers to publish the races’ actual results.

Now that it’s clear enough, however, that Obamacare is basically an expensive Medicaid expansion coupled with 2,400 pages of liberty-sapping mandates, it’s time for a winning Obamacare alternative to emerge, one along the lines of what Ed Gillespie almost rode to victory in the Virginia Senate race. Such an alternative should address the longstanding inequity in the tax code—between employer-based and individually purchased insurance—while adhering to four basic notions:

1. It shouldn’t touch the tax treatment of the typical American’s employer-based plan.

 

2. It should close the tax loophole on the employer side—which says that the more you spend (on insurance), the more you save (in taxes)—by capping the tax exclusion at $20,000 for a family plan (while letting anyone with a more expensive plan still get the full tax break on that first $20,000).

 

3. It should offer a simple tax break for individually purchased insurance that isn’t income-tested and thus doesn’t pick winners and losers (in marked contrast with Obamacare, which is all about picking winners and losers.)

 

4. It shouldn’t provide direct subsidies to insurance companies like Obamacare does. (The federal government provides a tax break for mortgage interest paid—it doesn’t directly pay a portion of people’s mortgage bills. Likewise, it shouldn’t directly pay people’s health insurance bills as if it were some kind of “single payer.”)

In addition, anyone crafting an Obamacare alternative should keep this important point in mind and express it publicly: Far from being the gospel truth, the CBO’s scoring is more like a wild guess that will never be checked against future reality.

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
15 Comments
card802
card802
March 29, 2016 4:44 pm

Fuck obamacare, shit legislation, brought to us by lying fucknuts.

https://youtu.be/KT86RL6sCkM

Anonymous
Anonymous
March 29, 2016 4:51 pm

HSA’s, voluntary ones not forced ones, are the only real solution to medical coverage and cost control.

And that would be Constitutional.

So they will not be considered.

Anonymous
Anonymous
March 29, 2016 5:10 pm

Obama Scam nothing more.Shut it down!

Westcoaster
Westcoaster
March 29, 2016 7:37 pm

If you hate Obongocare and are tired of paying big premiums for shit coverage, then vote for Bernie Sanders. With single-payer, you’ll not have to go through all the denials because you’ll be covered with no co-pays or deductibles. Sure you taxes might go up a little, but you’ll bottom line SAVE MONEY and get BETTER healthcare.

Tots
Tots
March 29, 2016 8:13 pm

Bull crap. We were told a batch of lies that didn’t come true for Obamacare and there is no way in Hell I’ll believe another bunch of lies to complete the transition to single payer.

The original plan was Obamacare would suck so bad that people would beg for single payer. Bernie’s plan is the completion of the original plan and his promises will be one more failure in a long line of failures.

Teri
Teri
March 29, 2016 8:22 pm

No thanks on single payer!! Every time the goobermint and its evil corporate twin, Big Insurance gets more involved in health care, it gets CONSIDERABLY worse. And more intrusive. And less about actual health care. Just wait ’till all the electronic records get hacked.

Why would any rational person want MORE goobermint involvement in their personal life in any fashion?

General
General
March 29, 2016 8:35 pm

Obamacare was designed to decrease private coverage and increase Medicaid enrollment. The next step is to combine Medicare and Medicaid to form the core of single payer. The level of care will go way down in the process.

overthecliff
overthecliff
March 29, 2016 8:36 pm

Westy has been assured yhat medical costs would go down by the CBO.

card802
card802
March 29, 2016 9:31 pm

No, Bernie promised he will tax the wealthy and corporations to reduce our health care, and national debt, and military complex, and and and fucking and.

Bernie, is a loon. But I would still take his loony fucked up ass over the other stupid democrat bitch.

rhs jr
rhs jr
March 29, 2016 9:50 pm

Common Core Math was invented to explain how Democrat Pogroms save taxpayers money but you must be a Useful Idiot to “understand” it, right Westy?

Anonymous
Anonymous
March 29, 2016 10:40 pm

Westcoaster,

Single Payer – VA, same same.

Cut costs by letting patients die before their appointment is scheduled, works every time (actually an official policy in England beyond a certain age).

Anonymous
Anonymous
March 29, 2016 11:15 pm

Guess Val Jarret needs to have Obama fly in mo Syrian muslums

Anonymous
Anonymous
March 29, 2016 11:19 pm

General -from what I’m reading when you hit 75 there is no more medical care.Also all opiates will be taken off the market and replaced with non opiates

General
General
March 30, 2016 1:17 am

In the United States, people still get medical care after age 75. In the medical field, doctors are getting paid less every year in certain procedurss, so there is less incentive to provide care. That way, the government doesn’t have to deny care like private insurances do. Eventually, for example, the reimbursement for a coronary bypass will be so low, surgeons will refuse to perform it on Medicare patients.

harry p
harry p
March 30, 2016 7:11 am

Westy?
More of the same stupidity only going further down the fucking rabbit hole is a solution?
Wutdafuqusmokin?