ArtK78, on 2013-December-11, 07:16, said:
This is the most important point made in this entire thread. The health care bill that was passed is what could be passed, not what should have been passed. And the opposition has imposed obstacles to the bill, inside and out, and now sits back and criticizes what the bill does and doesn't do (both factually and otherwise).
Think back to the attempt by the Clinton administration to get a health care bill through Congress. It could not be accomplished. The Obama Administration should be congratulated, not excoriated, for getting the ACA through Congress. And, although it is far from the bill that Obama wanted, at least it is in place.
As I have said in prior posts, in looking back on the ACA, history will place it alongside Social Security and Medicare as milestones in social policy.
The situation prior to the ACA was a total train wreck and had to be changed. The runaway costs were damaging our businesses and forcing us to spend way too much time on insurance issues instead of business-related matters. The ACA is surely not ideal by any means (it would have been a lot better simply to remove the Medicare age limit), but the ACA barely passed as it was. It has
a lot of moving parts.
The additional taxes were a bone of contention then and now. But the Medicare Part D prescription had been unfunded and the ACA corrected that. Furthermore, the "donut hole" is being closed gradually, and will be gone by 2020. You can find arguments that closing the donut hole is a terrible idea, but I think it fair to say that most folks don't see it that way.
And, as Ken has pointed out, there are folks who simply went untreated, so the only costs formerly rung up by those people were the costs associated with spreading untreated diseases and the indirect losses in productivity. Ken expressed concern over 567,000 new Medicaid recipients. But suppose that there are a
million of the working poor who had gone without care altogether, not even going to the emergency room for treatment. And suppose that under the ACA, they now receive an average of $5000 of medical care per year -- a pretty high figure for those who are not elderly. Those additional medical expenditures would still account for less than 2% of the annual healthcare costs of the US. Considering that we in the US pay around twice as much per capita as do countries that offer better medical care, we can absorb that 2%.
I do look at the
CBO projections for the ACA each year and have seen no cause for alarm. It would not surprise me to learn that these figures have worsened some with the latest tizzy, but I haven't been able to locate the specific figures that seem to be raising new alarms. If anyone has a link to some dramatically new projections, I'd be interested in taking a look.
Quote
Taking the coverage provisions and other provisions together, CBO and JCT have estimated that the ACA will reduce deficits over the next 10 years and in the subsequent decade.
So, more folks get the care they need, and the deficits go down as a result of the ACA. It's not perfect, for sure, but it's a whole lot better than what we had.
The growth of wisdom may be gauged exactly by the diminution of ill temper. Friedrich Nietzsche
The infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight to moralists that is why they invented hell. Bertrand Russell