Budget office cuts cost estimate of children’s insurance
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That means lawmakers should find it much easier to agree to a way to pay for extending the program.
The lower cost projection doesn't resolve the main barrier the bill faces. Extending the children's health program has become enmeshed in a battle among President
Once those more heated disputes are resolved, the conflict over children's health should end quickly.
Financing for the program expired last fall.
Counterintuitively, the bill's budget impact has shrunk because the Republican tax bill enacted last month eliminated the penalty President
That's because ending those penalties is projected to result in fewer healthy people buying coverage on marketplaces, driving premiums higher for remaining consumers. Since government subsidies for people buying policies are linked to premiums, higher premiums mean higher federal costs.
The budget analysts say extending the children's insurance program will encourage some parents to use that program and not the marketplaces. That would save the government money.
The new estimate was included in a letter the budget office sent Friday to Sen.
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