Analysis: What Happens to Floridians If Obamacare Goes Away?
When the Affordable Care Act, also known as the ACA or Obamacare, was enacted in 2010, lawmakers hoped it would help reduce the number of uninsured Americans. That year, an estimated 48.2 million people — about 18 percent of the
By 2023, the number of uninsured Americans had dropped by nearly 50 percent, to 25.3 million people under 65, or 9.5 percent of the total population.
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How the ACA Expanded Access to
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The ACA implemented a three-pronged strategy to expand access to affordable health insurance.
One was the use of fines. The government fined anyone — until 2018 — who chose not to get health insurance. The government also fined businesses with 50 or more full-time employees that didn't offer their employees affordable health-care plans. The idea was to offer incentives for healthy people to get insurance to lower costs for everyone.
Ultimately, the fines had little impact on the number of insured Americans, with one notable exception: The employer-required expansion allowed young adults ages 19 to 25 to remain on their parents' health insurance plan. For this group, the uninsured rate dropped from 31.5 percent in 2010 to 13.1 percent in 2023.
Second, the ACA allowed for Medicaid to be expanded to low-income Americans who were employed but working in low-wage jobs. The expansion of Medicaid to low-income workers at 138 percent of the federal poverty level was originally required nationwide. But a 2012
As of 2025, 16 million Americans are covered by the expansion. However, ten states, including
The third way the ACA changed the health insurance system is that it established health insurance subsidies that the government can provide. Those subsidies are for low- and moderate-income Americans who do not receive health insurance through their employers and aren't eligible for Medicaid, Medicare, or any other government-operated health insurance program.
This established a private health insurance marketplace that would include federal subsidies to make insurance more affordable. As of
The number of people insured under the ACA in each state varies. But the state with the largest number of residents on marketplace insurance plans is
There are several reasons this rate is so much higher in
First, only 40 percent of Sunshine State residents are covered by an employer-based health insurance plan, compared to 49 percent for the nation as a whole.
This is the lowest rate in the nation. One contributing factor is that
The state's lower rate could also be related to the high number of seasonal and part-time workers in the tourism industry.
Another reason is that the state is home to relatively few people enrolled in Medicaid, the federal program that provides mainly low-income people with health insurance coverage. Among Floridians ages 44 to 64, only 11 percent are enrolled in Medicaid, compared to 17 percent for the nation overall.
States set their own Medicaid eligibility criteria, and they determine what services Medicaid will cover and at what cost.
An Uncertain Path Ahead
Because
Unless
At 13.4 percent,
The path to resolve the ongoing debate is uncertain. In my view, however, it is clear that states such as
Editor's note: New Times occasionally shares articles from The Conversation, a nonprofit collaborative whose team of journalists works with academic experts to produce informative opinion and analysis for a general audience. The views expressed in this commentary are solely those of the writer(s). Unless otherwise noted, the content above was produced solely by The Conversation. This article is republished from The Conversation under a



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