And scrambling to the shore.
Friday, February 8, 2013
Congressional
Budget Office: Obamacare To Cost More, To Be More Disruptive, and To Be More
Difficult to Implement
And
thick and fast they came at last –
And
more, and more, and more.
All
hopping through the frothy waves,And scrambling to the shore.
Lewis
Carroll (1832-1908), Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland
February
9, 2012 - Obamacare
has always had an Alice in Wonderland feel
to it.
Obamacare was going to provide more care for more
people with more quality with more and
better outcomes at lower costs more efficiently, courtesy of Washington..
Federal experts, after all, designed it, and as we
all know, experts know more and more about less and less until they know
nothing about everything, including the 1.4 billion health care transactions
that occur every year in the U.S. health system at a cost of $2.8 trillion. Presumably increasing costs will go on until there isn’t any more in the
Federal Treasury or the Taxpayers’ pockets, or Medicare/Medicaid go bankrupt.
But as the experts hop through the frothy waves towards the shores of 2014, when Obamacare takes effect in earnest, it is
apparent the government is scrambling to
meet its promised targets of more and more and more.
According to the Washington Post, “Signing up an estimated 30 million Americans for
coverage under the health care law is shaping up to be, if not a nightmare, a daunting task.”
Daniel Henninger of the Wall
Street Journal, says it may even be
more than that - a “blob, a mess, a morass, “ and “we are only in the foothills
of Obamacare.”
In any event,
Obamacare sounded too good to be true, and it may be. According to the Congressional Budget Office,
who keeps tabs on what Congress spends, Obamacare will be:
·
More
expensive – the 10 year subsidy cost will be $233 billion, not $201 billion (up 15.9%); the total cost
through 2022 will be $1.05 trillion, not
$814 billion (up 28.9%); and the average subsidy for the uninsured or
underinsured will be $5510, not $3970 (up 38.8%), and we haven’t even reached
shore yet.
·
More
disruptive – The Congressional Budget Office has raised the estimate of the number of
workers employers will drop from health care coverage from 4 million to 7 million, an increase of 75%.
·
More
difficult to implement -
The CBO isn’t buying the Obama administration’s argument that the health
exchanges will be ready to go in 2014.
It says the administration has no
idea how many people will enroll in the exchanges, whether the exchanges will
be prepared to accept them, and how people will respond. Then there’s the reluctance of Republican governors
to set up their own exchanges, and the historical fact that after Medicaid was
introduced in 1965, it took nearly 20 years for the last holdout state to join the Medicaid program.
Tweet:
Come 2014, the CBO says exchanges won’t be ready for new
Medicaid recipients to enroll, and
people won’t be enthusiastic about signing up.
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