Costs
of Covering The Uninsured
All are but parts of the stupendous whole.
Alexander
Pope (1699-1744), Epistle
If one believes the primary purpose of ObamaCare has been to
cover the uninsured, the cost of insuring the uninsured has been
stupendous. According to the
Congressional Business Office and others, the true cost of ObamaCare through
2022-2025 will approach $2.5 trillion,
far above its original estimate of $984 billion. Unfortunately, the Obama administration itself says ObamaCare will still leave 30 million uninsured.
Uninsured
Assumptions
If one assumes 50
million were uninsured at ObamaCare’s onset 4 years ago, on March 23, 2010, and
the law would still leave 30 million
uninsured (a consensus assumption), that
would mean the law will rescue 20 million from the uninsured ranks over the next 10
years. By logical extension, the cost
of covering the uninsured, at the
stupendous price of turning the entire
health system upside down, would be $2.5
trillion/20 million, or $125,000 for each uninsured person insured.
Covering
Uninsured – The First Four Years
If $125,000 sounds high, consider ObamaCare’s performance so
far. It is estimated that the law in its
first 4 years has insured 8.6 million of the uninsured - 4.5 million in Medicaid, 3.0 million young people up to 26 covered
under their parents’ plans, and 1.1
million so far enrolled in the ObamaCare's state and federal health exchanges.
At what cost? If one assumes the $2.5
trillion cost over the next 10 years is correct, that would amount to $2.5 billion a
year, or $10 billion over the first 4 years, or $10
billion/8.6 million newly insured, or $116,279 per each uninsured insured.
Too
High a Price to Pay?
Is this too high a price to pay? Charles Krauthammer, MD, a critic of ObamaCare, thinks it is when one considers
the price entails overhauling the entire U.S. health system, turning it upside down, and slowing growth for the economy as a whole.
Krauthammer's reasoning goes like this.
"On these exchanges, you've got to ask yourself the price we
have paid, the estimate is 1 to 1.5 million of these people were
uninsured before. The whole idea was insuring the uninsured. So that's
going to leave about 40 million uninsured. And for that, we have to
cancel 6 million policies? And for that millions of people have lost
their doctors and their hospitals and for that people in northern New
Hampshire have to drive past the two best hospitals in the state all the
way to the south because the two hospitals in the north aren't covered?
"
Health spending now runs $2.7 trillion per
year, or roughly 1/6 of America’s $16.5
trillion economy, which is now running a national debt of $17.5 trillion. These numbers dwarf the $ 120,000 X 30 million left-over uninsured
that would be required to erase America’s
50 million uninsured.
Oh well, to paraphrase the late Senator Everett Dirksen
(1896-1969), a trillion here, a trillion
there, and pretty soon we’re talking about real money.
Healthcare.gov
and PR Promotion of Health Exchanges
Speaking of real money, current estimates are healthcare.gov
cost the federal government $1 billion and the states $500 million to build, and will cost $700 billion for the federal and state governments to repair plus another $1 billion for the PR
campaign and recruiting navigators to
sign up enrollees. This comes to a grand total of $3.2 billion to cover 8.6 million newly insured, or $3,721 for each person now covered who
was formerly uninsured. To paraphrase Milton Friedman(1912-2006), there is no such thing as a free launch.
Tweet: The
total cost of covering the uninsured is running over $116,000 for each newly insured person with over $3700 going to cover website and PR costs to promote
health exchange enrollments.
1 comment:
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