Coverage loses in CBO score largely driven by repeal of individual mandate.

jeffblue101

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CBO's Secret: 73% Of Coverage Difference Between Obamacare & GOP Bills Driven By Individual Mandate
Proposals to repeal and replace Obamacare from congressional Republicans and right-of-center think tanks disagreed on a number of things, but they were unanimous in repealing Obamacare’s individual mandate. The idea that Americans should be forced by the government to buy a private product, merely for the offense of being alive, is seen by all conservatives as a constitutional injury....

And there’s a more fundamental question: if Obamacare’s insurance is so wonderful, why do millions of Americans need to be forced to buy it? By definition, you haven’t been “kicked off” your insurance if the only reason you’re no longer buying it is that the government has stopped fining you.

And there’s a more fundamental question: if Obamacare’s insurance is so wonderful, why do millions of Americans need to be forced to buy it? By definition, you haven’t been “kicked off” your insurance if the only reason you’re no longer buying it is that the government has stopped fining you.

CBO has refused to disclose the impact of mandate repeal on coverage estimates

Arguably the most significant data point in the entire debate about the Senate health care bill has been the CBO’s claim that in 2026, 22 million fewer people would have health insurance under the Senate bill than under Obamacare.

Democrats have seized on this number to stoke fears about the bill’s impact; moderate Republicans, intimidated by the negative headlines, have been reluctant to support the bill.

But buried within the CBO’s reports is a key fact: the vast majority of those coverage “losses” occur because the GOP bills repeal Obamacare’s individual mandate. In its July 20 estimate of the most recent version of the Senate’s Better Care Reconciliation Act, or BCRA, CBO says that in 2018, 15 million fewer Americans will have health insurance under the bill, two years before its repeal of Obamacare’s insurance subsidies takes effect.

Why? It’s “primarily because the penalty for not having insurance would be eliminated.”


This week, I obtained from a congressional staffer the CBO’s estimates of the coverage impact of repealing the individual mandate, separate from the Senate bill’s other provisions. The estimate was built out of earlier work CBO did to model how repealing the mandate would affect the federal deficit. CBO projected then that repealing the mandate alone would lead to 15 million fewer insured U.S. residents in 2018, and 16 million fewer by 2026, though they did not publish those estimates

16 million represents nearly three-fourths of the CBO’s estimate of the coverage difference between the GOP bills and Obamacare in 2026. That’s despite the fact that, as I noted in March, even Jonathan Gruber—one of Obamacare’s most famous advocates—believes Obamacare’s individual mandate is having little effect. In a 2016 article for the New England Journal of Medicine, Gruber and two co-authors wrote, "When we assessed the mandate’s detailed provisions, which include income-based penalties for lacking coverage and various specific exemptions from those penalties, we did not find that overall coverage rates responded to these aspects of the law.”


To be clear, even if one excludes the CBO’s exaggerated view of the impact of the individual mandate, CBO scores the Senate bill as covering 6 million fewer people than Obamacare in 2026: 2 percent of the U.S. population. But even that number can be partially explained by CBO’s outdated March 2016 baseline, which assumes that enrollment in Obamacare’s exchanges peaks out at 19 million, when it’s more likely to end up below 9 million, if Obamacare stays on the books and premiums continue to rise

GOP moderates have no reason to be intimidated by exaggerated coverage loss claims

As I noted above, a number of GOP moderates have cited the CBO's 22 million figure as the key reason why they're reluctant to support the BCRA. But if they support repealing Obamacare's individual mandate, then they support any bill that, according to the CBO, would “reduce” coverage by 16 million people.


The GOP Senate health reform bill does repeal Obamacare's Medicaid expansion. But it replaces it with a robust system of tax credits and block grants that ensure that every single person enrolled in that Medicaid expansion will get financial assistance to afford private coverage. Senate Republicans could spend even more money covering Obamacare enrollees’ health care costs—and they might want to—but the CBO’s model is designed to treat any mandate-repealing GOP bill as covering fewer people than Obamacare.

The CBO’s love affair with the individual mandate is the reason why there’s really nothing Republican senators can do to improve the CBO’s coverage score of their bill. It doesn’t matter how much money Republicans throw at the problem; if you don’t have an individual mandate, CBO assumes 16 million fewer people will have coverage right off the bat. It doesn't matter if you keep nearly all of Obamacare's spending and most of its taxes, as Sens. Bill Cassidy (La.) and Lindsey Graham (S.C.) propose: CBO assumes 16 million fewer people will have coverage right off the bat.

So, the choice for Republicans is this. Do you support repealing Obamacare's individual mandate, or preserving it? If you support repealing it—whatever other policy details you prefer—the CBO is going to generate misleading headlines about 16 million people being “kicked off” their insurance.

If you support repealing the mandate, you're going to need to surpass those headlines and do what you were elected to do: replace Obamacare with market-based policies that show that patient-centered health reform is better than government-centered health reform.
 

kmoney

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Hall of Fame
I've wondered about some of this as well. How many people in that number of uninsured would drop off because they simply don't want it? How many would have some if they could afford it? A simple number doesn't show the whole picture. Perhaps the number of insured shouldn't be the end-all.

The primary reason for the mandate is to increase the cost-sharing and hopefully make things more affordable. But perhaps there are better ways to create a system of affordable health insurance for those who want it.
 

jeffblue101

New member
I've wondered about some of this as well. How many people in that number of uninsured would drop off because they simply don't want it? How many would have some if they could afford it? A simple number doesn't show the whole picture. Perhaps the number of insured shouldn't be the end-all.

The primary reason for the mandate is to increase the cost-sharing and hopefully make things more affordable. But perhaps there are better ways to create a system of affordable health insurance for those who want it.

Well given how weak the mandate is, I think the vast majority of people who signed up for obamacare have done so because they want some type of insurance coverage or they may even like the comprehensive insurance that Obamacare provides. I highly doubt that very many people bought Obamacare to avoid paying the weak penalty.
 

kmoney

New member
Hall of Fame
Well given how weak the mandate is, I think the vast majority of people who signed up for obamacare have done so because they want some type of insurance coverage or they may even like the comprehensive insurance that Obamacare provides. I highly doubt that very many people bought Obamacare to avoid paying the weak penalty.
That seems like an argument for the ACA. Or at least an argument that it hasn't been a major failure. If the majority of those people got insurance because they wanted it, and they only got it after the ACA, then it would lead me to believe something in the ACA made it possible for them to get it. Otherwise, why didn't they already have it? And that would make the concerns moderate Republicans have make sense.


If you support repealing the mandate, you're going to need to surpass those headlines and do what you were elected to do: replace Obamacare with market-based policies that show that patient-centered health reform is better than government-centered health reform.
That is from the article but how would you define patient-centered vs government-centered?
 
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