Straight Talk On Obamacare
| By Weiler, Jonathan | |
| Proquest LLC |
What will - and won't - happen under health care reform
The
The ACA is imperfect. It represents an ungainly and in some respects unseemly compromise with powerful interests, including the private health insurance industry and Big Pharma. Even when the ACA is in full force, it won't cover all Americans.
Much remains uncertain about the law, including the fate in some states of the health insurance exchanges, where individual Americans will shop for insurance, slated to go live in 2014. Opportunities for mischief-making by recalcitrant Republican governors have been amplified by the
If
* Polling shows that Americans overwhelmingly support most key features of the law, including the ACA's legal requirement prohibiting insurance companies from denying coverage because of pre-existing conditions or from dropping people from policies who get sick.
Most Americans also support subsidies provided under the ACA to help lower-income Americans buy insurance and tax credits for small businesses that offer health insurance to their employees. Other popular provisions include the gradual dosing of the notorious doughnut hole in prescription drug coverage for seniors; the increased
* The ACA won't affect most Americans' coverage.
When ACA is fully implemented a decade from now, the
But millions of Americans either purchase health insurance in the individual market or don't have it at all. Enter the exchanges and the individual mandate, the most controversial and least popular part of the law. The idea behind the mandate is that everyone, whether they have health insurance or not, requires health care at some point and therefore is a cost to the health care system. So it is reasonable to expect everyone who can pay something toward supporting that system should do so.
The logic follows that since insurance companies are required to cover everyone, their business model would soon become unsustainable if their only customers were older and sicker. Insurers, in other words, depend upon the premiums of healthy individuals to offset the costs of covering unhealthy ones, hence the mandate that all people either buy insurance or pay a fine for refusing to do so.
Individuals not otherwise covered who earn up to 400 percent of the federal poverty level will receive subsidies to buy insurance in the state-based exchanges. Through these exchanges, people can shop for different policies that vary in their levels of coverage but that legally would be required to provide basic benefits. Those who are deemed able to afford coverage but choose not to buy it will be assessed a fine - either
The CBO estimates that roughly 4 million people will pay the fine, though others believe the numbers will be lower. Since the
* Perhaps the single most significant feature of the ACA is its substantial expansion of
This is a higher rate than
The kind of cruel and gratuitous suffering has been on display in
As recently as five years ago, professed support for the goal of universal coverage was arguably bipartisan, even as the parties differed about how to achieve that goal. In 2012, however, Republican leaders have expressed increasing indifference to, if not outright scorn for, the uninsured. They've universally vilified a health care reform package that, in many of its essential features, was originally conceived by a conservative think tank and signed into law in
There is tremendous work to be done to implement the existing features of the ACA and to continue the political battles necessary to ensure a more just and universal system than the one envisioned by Obamacare. And one can expect no help from Republicans in either endeavor, committed as they presently are to an ever more punitive and penurious vision for the sick if they can't afford minimally decent health care.
| Copyright: | (c) 2012 Independent Weekly |
| Wordcount: | 1114 |


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