Author Topic: New report - Obamacare explodes the debt by $530 Billion over 10 years.  (Read 1750 times)


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STUDY: Obamacare Will Explode The Deficit By $527 Billion Over The Next Decade

Michael Brendan Dougherty | Apr. 10, 2012, 8:33 AM | 1,748 | 32




White House photo
 
Obama's health care reform was sold as a deficit cutting bill, mostly because it raises taxes, lowers medical-related defaults, and cuts Medicare's reimbursements to doctors who treat patients.

But according to a new study to be released today it will actually increase deficits by $527 billion (at least) over the next decade. That figure comes from an Investor's Business Daily report. (Others peg the deficit increase at $340 billion)

The study was done by Charles Blahous, a conservative policy analyst whom Obama approved in 2010 as the GOP trustee for Medicare and Social Security. It contradicts previous ones by the Congressional Budget Office, which Blahous told the Washington Post doesn't "fully illuminate the financial impact of the health-care law" and double-counts savings from Medicare cuts.

According to The Post's report, the Obama administration is dumping all over the study. "Opponents of reform are using ‘new math’ while they attempt to refight the political battles of the past,” a White House budget official said, speaking on the condition of anonymity because the report was not publicly available.

Here is the video that comes along with the study, explaining the "double-counting" problems with Obamacare:



Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/study-obamacare-will-explode-the-deficit-by-527-billion-over-the-next-decade-2012-4#ixzz1reBUbBL9



________________________ _____________


Cue in the brain dead obama cvnts like 240 andre blackass et al to defend this craziness. 

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Obama's health care law would raise deficit

By RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR | Associated Press – 7 hrs ago....Email



....WASHINGTON (AP) — Reigniting a debate about the bottom line for President Barack Obama's health care law, a leading conservative economist estimates in a study to be released Tuesday that the overhaul will add at least $340 billion to the deficit, not reduce it.

Charles Blahous, who serves as public trustee overseeing Medicare and Social Security finances, also suggested that federal accounting practices have obscured the true fiscal impact of the legislation, the fate of which is now in the hands of the Supreme Court.

Officially, the health care law is still projected to help reduce government red ink. The Congressional Budget Office, the government's nonpartisan fiscal umpire, said in an estimate last year that repealing the law actually would increase deficits by $210 billion from 2012 to 2021.

The CBO, however, has not updated that projection. If $210 billion sounds like a big cushion, it's not. The government has recently been running annual deficits in the $1 trillion range.

The White house dismissed the study in a statement late Monday. Presidential assistant Jeanne Lambrew called the study "new math (that) fits the old pattern of mischaracterizations" about the health care law.

Blahous, in his 52-page analysis released by George Mason University's Mercatus Center, said, "Taken as a whole, the enactment of the (health care law) has substantially worsened a dire federal fiscal outlook.

"The (law) both increases a federal commitment to health care spending that was already unsustainable under prior law and would exacerbate projected federal deficits relative to prior law," Blahous said.

The law expands health insurance coverage to more than 30 million people now uninsured, paying for it with a mix of Medicare cuts and new taxes and fees.

Blahous cited a number of factors for his conclusion:

— The health care's law deficit cushion has been reduced by more than $80 billion because of the administration's decision not to move forward with a new long-term care insurance program that was part of the legislation. The Community Living Assistance Services and Supports program raised money in the short term, but would have turned into a fiscal drain over the years.

— The cost of health insurance subsidies for millions of low-income and middle-class uninsured people could turn out to be higher than forecast, particularly if employers scale back their own coverage.

— Various cost-control measures, including a tax on high-end insurance plans that doesn't kick in until 2018, could deliver less than expected.

The decision to use Medicare cuts to finance the expansion of coverage for the uninsured will only make matters worse, Blahous said. The money from the Medicare savings will have been spent, and lawmakers will have to find additional cuts or revenues to forestall that program's insolvency.

Under federal accounting rules, the Medicare cuts are also credited as savings to that program's trust fund. But the CBO and Medicare's own economic estimators already said the government can't spend the same money twice.

Blahous served in the George W. Bush White House from 2001-2009, rising to deputy director of the National Economic Council. He currently is a senior research fellow at the Mercatus Center.

His study was first reported late Monday by The Washington Post.

..

dario73

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Obama supporters are like roaches.

They disapppear when hit by the light of the truth.

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Obama supporters are like roaches.

They disapppear when hit by the light of the truth.

Type in fluke, gay, palin, lgbt, condoms, birtch certificate and they all show up. 


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Affordable Care Act

Charles Blahous | 04/10/2012




This morning the Mercatus Center is publishing my study, “The Fiscal Consequences of the Affordable Care Act,” which evaluates the comprehensive health care reform law (the ACA) enacted in 2010. In this study, I project that the ACA will add over $1.15 trillion to net federal spending and more than $340 billion to federal deficits over the next ten years, and far more thereafter.

That this law on which so many high hopes were placed will significantly worsen federal finances is an unfortunate but unambiguous result. The finding is based upon analyses published by the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) and CMS Medicare Actuary, and it reflects an optimistic fiscal scenario in which all of the law’s cost-saving provisions work as currently envisioned.

Quantifying the Fiscal Consequences of Health Care Reform

The fiscal stakes of health care reform are high. Prior to the law’s passage its proponents and opponents disagreed on many things but they agreed on one: rising health care cost commitments were a key driver of an unsustainable federal fiscal outlook. Motivations and goals for the 2010 legislation were various, but among the most prominent was the view that such action was necessary to correct the course of federal finances. For this landmark legislation to actually worsen the fiscal situation would represent a substantial failure of governance, and it threatens disastrous consequences if the law is not corrected before its provisions become fully effective.

The ACA unambiguously worsens federal finances. As the accompanying graph shows, under a variety of possible assumptions (all based on the analyses of CBO and CMS), our annual deficits will be much larger because of the ACA than they would have been under prior law. As visually represented in this picture, up is good and down is bad from a budgetary perspective.



The top two lines on the graph show that the law appears to have a helpful effect on the federal budget under a particular government scorekeeping convention. This is true both as originally scored by CBO and as adjusted for last year’s suspension of one of the law’s provisions, the CLASS program. The bottom three lines, however, show that the ACA greatly worsens the situation relative to actual previous law.

Under each of optimistic, mixed-outcome, and pessimistic assumptions concerning the future implementation of ACA’s various provisions, the law would add between $340 and $530 billion to federal deficits over the next decade. Under the pessimistic scenario – by no means a worst-case scenario, but one assuming that Congress acts in the future according to historical precedent – the law would add over $100 billion annually to federal deficits by 2021. This suggests that it would add more than $1 trillion to deficits in its second decade.

There are two important yardsticks for measuring the fiscal effects of health care reform. Measuring its effects on federal deficits is one. The other -- its effect on total federal health care spending – is equally important. This is because under current law, federal health care spending commitments are widely acknowledged to be unsustainable. A “solution” that appears to reduce federal deficits while adding to total federal health care spending is no solution at all, as it would subject future generations to tax burdens far higher than the American public has ever tolerated. This is why health experts across the ideological spectrum have stressed the necessity not only of reducing federal deficits, but also of “bending the health care cost curve” downward.

Unfortunately, the ACA fails this second test by an even wider margin. Under any realistic scenario it would add to federal outlays by more than $1.15 trillion over the next ten years.

The Use of Medicare Savings to Finance a New Health Entitlement

Why are these dire fiscal consequences not more widely understood? A great source of confusion lies in government scorekeeping methods, which compare the effects of legislation to a hypothetical baseline scenario rather than to enacted law. To understand the difference, it is necessarily to go briefly into the weeds of Medicare trust fund accounting.

The ACA contains many provisions designed to slow the growth of Medicare spending. This matters here because the federal Medicare program is financed in a particular way – from special, separate trust funds. The Medicare Hospital Insurance (HI) Trust Fund in particular is governed under law by certain rules. Medicare HI is only permitted to spend money on benefits as long as there is a positive balance in its trust fund. If that trust fund is depleted, then under law benefit payments must automatically be cut to the level that can be financed from incoming tax revenues.

This is relevant to an evaluation of the ACA because the CMS Medicare Actuary has projected that had the ACA not been passed the Medicare HI Trust Fund would have been depleted in 2016. If that were allowed to happen, Medicare HI payments would have been sharply cut in that year.

Due to the ACA’s Medicare cost-savings provisions, however, these automatic spending cuts are no longer projected to begin in 2016. Medicare HI is now projected to remain solvent until 2024, postponing forced outlay reductions until then. In other words, the ACA’s Medicare provisions decrease the level of Medicare HI spending prior to 2016, but then increase it from 2016-2024 relative to previous law. Considered separate and apart that would be a good thing, but it has inescapable fiscal ramifications in the context of the ACA’s other spending expansions.

Here’s a simple way to think of it: under law Medicare is permitted to spend any proceeds of savings in the Medicare HI program. If we cut $1 from Medicare HI spending in the near term, then an additional $1 is credited to the HI Trust Fund as a result. The Trust Fund thus lasts longer and its spending authority is expanded, permitting it to spend another $1 in a later year.

A core fiscal problem with the ACA is that the same $1 in Medicare savings that expands Medicare’s future spending authority by $1 is also assumed to finance the creation of a large new federal health program. Taken together, these two expansions of spending authorities – the new health program and Medicare’s solvency extension – far exceed the cost-savings in the legislation.

Many people understood this instinctively when the law was originally debated. They wondered how a law could simultaneously extend the solvency of Medicare, provide subsidized health coverage to 30 million new people, and also reduce the deficit. The answer is that it can’t. The cost-savings of the ACA are insufficient to both extend Medicare solvency and finance a new health program without adding enormously to the federal debt.

The government scorekeeping conventions now in wide use are useful and appropriate for many policy purposes, but unfortunately they do not account for this phenomenon. CBO is diligent in carefully noting that these scoring conventions, dating back to the 1985 Deficit Control Act, do not represent actual law. As CBO states, “CBO’s baseline incorporates the assumption that payments will continue to be made after the trust fund has been exhausted, although there is no legal authority to make such payments.” The scorekeeping convention thus ignores the additional spending authority created when the HI trust fund is extended as occurs under the ACA. Unfortunately, few people read or understand these critical disclosures.

As a result, much of the cost-savings attributed to the ACA is actually not net new savings, but rather substitutions for those required under previous law. Under previous law, Medicare payments either would have been suddenly cut in 2016, or lawmakers would have had to enact other Medicare cost-savings (indeed, perhaps much like those in the ACA). The difference is that under previous law this all would have happened without also creating an expensive new spending program.

The graph below shows the vast difference between the Medicare cost-savings attributed to the ACA under the prevailing scoring convention, and the much lesser amount of actual net new savings.



It is critical to understand that this is not merely a presentational matter. It is reflective of something far more important than the dueling press releases of health care reform’s proponents and opponents. It means that under law, substantial real additional spending and real additional debt will accrue as a result of the legislation having been passed.

Alternative Scenarios

The results presented thus far assume that all of the ACA’s cost-savings provisions work as currently envisioned, even those that would require future Congresses to behave in ways considerably different from historical precedent. Unfortunately, the projected fiscal results of the ACA grow still worse when various plausible legislative scenarios are taken into account.

The ACA contains various provisions that aim to constrain the growing costs of federal health care spending, as well as various provisions that would expand its spending commitments. There is a substantial risk that its cost-increasing provisions will cost more than currently projected, and that its cost-containing measures will accomplish less than currently projected.

The law’s new health insurance exchanges are particularly susceptible to future expansion. This is generally the case with major federal entitlement programs. The original design of Social Security, for example, did not include any of cost-of-living-adjustments, early retirement options, disability benefits, or today’s more generous benefit formula. All of those were added later as individuals grew more dependent on the program.

The ACA’s new health exchange subsidies are currently designed so that their total cost will not grow faster than our gross domestic product (GDP). Because health care costs tend to grow faster than the underlying economy, this means that low-income participants in the exchanges would over time shoulder an increasing share of their health care expenses. Would this be politically sustainable, or would lawmakers yield to pressure expand the subsidies to spare poor participants from these cost increases? Even if participation were as projected by the CMS Actuary, if it grew afterward by a mere 1% annually, and if the subsidies grew only with health care inflation, this would add $50 billion to their costs in the first ten years and far more afterward.

On the other hand, the law’s cost-savings measures could well produce considerably less savings than now assumed. The law establishes a controversial new Independent Payment Advisory Board, charged with facilitating measures to hold down the growth of Medicare costs over time. There is a substantial risk that its recommendations could be overridden or that the board will be eliminated altogether.

In addition, various new taxes under the law could unleash a dynamic much like the one that now exists with the federal Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT). Under current-law projections, the AMT would bring in dramatically rising federal revenues over time because its income thresholds are not indexed. Each year, Congress acts to raise these thresholds so that rapidly rising numbers of Americans are not newly subject to the AMT. The ACA’s “Cadillac-plan tax” and 3.8% Medicare surcharge are similarly designed such that they would subject rapidly rising numbers of Americans to these taxes every year. If Congress simply allows the thresholds triggering these taxes to rise with general economic growth, they will produce far less revenue than currently projected.

None of this is to suggest that the ACA’s various cost-savings measures are necessarily bad policies. But their proceeds cannot safely be spent until they have verifiably accrued.

Under a plausible “pessimistic” scenario in which future Congresses handle such provisions roughly in keeping with historical precedent, the ACA will add nearly $530 billion to federal deficits over the next ten years, and far more thereafter.

Fiscal Corrections

Properly understood, the ACA stands to precipitate dire fiscal consequences. To forestall these, sharp corrections are required before 2014, when millions of Americans would begin to depend on its various new benefits.

To meet the original promise that the legislation would bend the federal health care cost curve downward, fully $1.15 trillion in spending over the next ten years would need to be stripped out of the law. This would gut the preponderance of its subsidized coverage expansions, both through the health exchanges and through Medicaid and CHIP.

A more modest standard would be to require that the law simply not make the federal deficit situation worse under a more pessimistic (but plausible) scenario. This would still allow the law to add to overall federal health care obligations, but would at least provide protection against the possibility of accelerating severe federal fiscal problems. Aiming for this weaker standard could allow the law’s Medicaid/CHIP expansion to remain in place but would require eliminating roughly two-thirds of the law’s health exchange subsidies.

There are many important issues surrounding health care reform that my study does not speak to. Among them are: the constitutionality of the law’s health insurance purchase mandate; the appropriate role for the federal government in facilitating expanded coverage; the long-term viability of the ACA’s Medicare cost restraints; how central the role of employer-provided coverage should remain; and the merits of the IPAB concept. My paper instead focuses on a central fiscal question: does this law improve or worsen the federal government’s fiscal predicament?

The answer, unfortunately, is that it greatly worsens the fiscal outlook. Only by considerably scaling back the new spending commitments made under the law, or by finding new financing sources for these commitments, will it make the positive contribution to federal finances that experts across the ideological spectrum agree is required.

Charles Blahous is a research fellow with the Hoover Institution, a senior research fellow with the Mercatus Center, and the author of Social Security: The Unfinished Work


http://economics21.org/commentary/fiscal-consequences-affordable-care-act


dario73

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Just when you think it can't possibly get any worse, it does.

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DISASTER: People Hate Obamacare More Than Ever
Brett LoGiurato | 15 minutes ago | 273 | 12



A new Washington Post/ABC News poll out today confirms what we all pretty much already knew: Obamacare is not very popular. 

In fact, the Affordable Care Act, President Barack Obama's signature legislative achievement, hit a new low in popularity in its latest poll. It follows a two-week flurry of mostly negative attention targeted toward the bill.

A whopping 53 percent of Americans now oppose the law, compared with only 39 percent that are in favor of it. These numbers did not change much from the last WaPo/ABC poll before the Supreme Court oral arguments, but the new low is significant.

Two-thirds of people think that the high court should either strike down the law or at least the individual mandate portion.

In a separate but troubling find, half of the public expects the Supreme Court judges to rule on partisan political views. Only 40 percent of those surveyed expect a ruling based on a strict legal interpretation.

The low point in the polls comes after several momentum-swinging events. The most prominent of those, by far, were the historic three days of oral arguments before the Supreme Court on the constitutionality of the law and its signature provision, the individual mandate requiring individuals to purchase health care. Going into the arguments, most legal experts thought the law would be upheld. That swung quickly.

Then, Obama faced some backlash because of the virtual "dare" he gave the Supreme Court to overturn his law.

"Ultimately I am confident that the Supreme Court will not take what would be an unprecedented, extraordinary step of overturning a law that was passed by a strong majority of a democratically elected Congress," he said in a press conference the following week.

Then a Rasmussen poll foreshadowed the latest lack of popularity with Obamacare. The poll found that Supreme Court favorability ratings had swung dramatically in March, as a response to the oral arguments, backlash against Obama, or both.

"I think we're seeing as much as anything a response to the coverage of it," Rasmussen said. "... When you have a CNN legal expert [Jeffrey Toobin] come running out and saying, 'I know two days ago I said they were sure to uphold this by a wide margin, and now I'm sure it will be defeated,' people assume there was something significant to that."

And could popularity dip even lower after the latest bombshell yesterday? Talking, of course, about the study that has Obamacare exploding deficits by $527 million over the next decade.



Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/obamacare-popularity-lowest-ever-2012-4#comment-4f859637eab8eadf0e000063#ixzz1rk6Cm4Cn


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There's A Healthcare Accounting Scandal At Bankrupt USA Inc.

James Pethokoukis, The American Enterprise Institute Blog

 
Turns out Obamacare really does the bend the curve — in the wrong direction

Buffett Rule tax just the start for Obama
 
So there’s this $15 trillion mega-company, USA Inc. Great brand, great history, great products (liberty, entrepreneurial capitalism). We all know it.

But USA Inc. is way, way in debt. Borrowing 40 cents for every dollar it spends. Cash flow negative. Net worth negative and deteriorating. Massive off-balance sheet liabilities. Recently had its credit rating downgraded. Company has hardly grown since 2006.

And the new CEO it hired in November 2008? Jury is still out on that guy, but it’s looking bad.

He’s certainly good at spending money though. Instead of trimming product lines, cutting overhead, and getting back to core competencies, he created a pricey, new health benefit, Obamacare, that is somehow supposed to save $143 billion over ten years. The key phrase here is “supposed to save.”

A courageous whistleblower, Charles Blahous, says Obamacare will actually increase USA Inc.’s indebtedness by at least $346 billion between now and 2021 — and the price tag might be as high as $527 billion. See, the company is double counting savings from the reworked company health plan to both reduce debt and pay for increased benefits. It is spending the same buck twice. A bunch of company flacks — most notably Paul Krugman — are attacking this blahous guy like crazy, but the grift is pretty easy to understand.

It’s kind of like someone who wins $50,000 in the lottery and puts the money in an investment account to pay for his kids’ college education. But Mr. Lottery Winner “borrows” the money from the investment account to buy a Chevy Volt, replacing the investment dollars with slips of paper reading,”Promise to pay in full in 18 years. Double-dog promise.” Let Future Mr. Lottery Winner worry about that one.

Clearly some shareholders have had enough. They want to hire this hot-shot, turnaround artist as the new CEO by year end, Guy used to work at Bain Capital. Great track record making troubled companies profitable again, saving thousands of jobs in the process. Lots of ideas to do the same for USA Inc.

These insurgents may not have the votes to pull off a leadership switch, but the Obamacare scandal just improved the chances that USA Inc. will have a new CEO come 2013.

This post was originally published by The Online Magazine of The American Enterprise Institute.



Read more: http://blog.american.com/2012/04/healthcare-accounting-scandal-at-bankrupt-usa-inc-someone-call-bain-capital/#ixzz1rk9s6KkX