"ESTIMATE" .... ? Forgive me ... I recall someone once talking about that ...
... but he was at the time discussing "MILLIONS" ... I'll revise it for current events!
"A billion here and a billion there soon adds up to big money"! My revision is:
We don't spend 120 BILLION to insure 11 million people.
But the real flaw in your "analysis" is estimates are just that ... estimates ... and the current estimates are based on the projected income stream from the ACA that includes the "taxes" and repayment of subsidies, not to mention the COSTS of bailouts of the failed carriers under the "re-insure" provisions of the ACA. It also does not factor in the increased COSTS to the private sector insureds who are now paying higher premiums and higher deductibles and copays....along with reduced benefits, which means either less healthcare or more out of pocket expenditures.
Originally Posted by LexusLover
LL, don't know where you get your information from, apparently not from the CBO. The CBO has estimated the cost to be 1 trillion over a TEN YEAR PERIOD. It's all in table 1 which you refuse to read. The risk corridors (bailouts) for the insurance companies that lost money on the exchanges is only for three years and ends in 2016. You should stop posting about things you know NOTHING ABOUT.
Table 1 from the link below.
10-YEAR EFFECTS ON THE FEDERAL DEFICIT, 2012-2021d,e
(Billions of dollars, by fiscal year)
Medicaid and CHIP Outlays
627
795
168
Exchange Subsidies and Related Spendingf
777
681
-97
Small Employer Tax Creditsg
41
21
-20
Gross Cost of Coverage Provisions
1,445
1,496
51
Penalty Payments by Uninsured Individuals
-34
-45
-11
Penalty Payments by Employersg
-81
-96
-15
Excise Tax on High-Premium Insurance Plansg
-87
-79
8
Other Effects on Tax Revenues and Outlaysh
-113
-193
-81
Net Cost of Coverage Provisions
1,131
1,083
-48
Medicare Part D, signed into law by your hero BUSH43 is a cost of 727 Billion over TEN YEARS and all it does is help seniors pay for their prescription drugs. To treat a Long term illness cost a lot more than prescription drugs.
From the Medicare Part D link:
As of the end of year 2008, the average annual per beneficiary cost spending for Part D, reported by the Department of Health and Human Services, was $1,517,
[17] making the total expenditures of the program for 2008 $49.3 (billions). Projected net expenditures from 2009 through 2018 are estimated to be $727.3 billion.
http://www.cbo.gov/sites/default/fil...0Estimates.pdf
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medicare_Part_D