The big question is, "how many actually now have health insurance"?
I think we had all better wait and see how many checks clear the bank.
65 Million people voted Democrat in the 2012 general election. 7 million have signed up for ACA. 10%. Originally Posted by boardmanYou're missing one key ingredient. There were a significant percentage of the 65 million individuals who voted for Obama that already had a "Pre-Obamacare" health care plans in place. Thus, there was no need for them to purchase another policy
What is troubling about that 7 million (actually 6 million) threshold is that we don't and won't know for a while who is enrolled. For some reason pundits seem to agree that 6 million individuals is where enrollment would have to be to prevent any form of repeal. I guess they feel that is where the plan becomes sustainable but...
65 Million people voted Democrat in the 2012 general election. 7 million have signed up for ACA. 10%. Ok some of the states have their own exchange so maybe it's 14 million that have signed up. Some of those are bound to be people who voted Republican though so for a good round number let's say that 10 million 2012 Democratic voters have signed up or about 1 in 6. Why haven't they all signed up. This is what they voted to keep. 60% of people 18-29 voted democrat but those don't appear to be the people signing up.
Here's where things get really fucked up. From video I saw at different places where people were standing in line it didn't appear to be young 20 somethings doing the waiting. Now maybe they are more computer savvy and signed up on line but I personally know several young people(25-35) that have chosen to pay the $95 fine next year rather than the $150/month premium. In three years that fine is projected to increase to around $700 but if young healthy people aren't signing up then taxes or "fines" will have to increase AND cost controls will have to be put in place. So sustainability is very subjective. Liberals would argue, I guess, that as long as the government can keep printing money and paying the bills it is sustainable. Conservatives feel like it should pay it's own way in order to be considered sustainable. The ride is just going to get bumpier and the fat cats in DC will find plenty of ways to keep getting fatter. Originally Posted by boardman
The big question is, "how many actually now have health insurance"?In February Kathleen Sebelius said that as high as 20% of those signing up didn't pay the premiums.
I think we had all better wait and see how many checks clear the bank. Originally Posted by Jackie S
I suppose I would agree, but conservatives paying their own way is bullshitPerhaps you meant Republicans.
2 wars
increasing defense spending in every budget
and 3 sets of tax cuts come to mind Originally Posted by CJ7
You're missing one key ingredient. There were a significant percentage of the 65 million individuals who voted for Obama that already had a "Pre-Obamacare" health care plans in place. Thus, there was no need for them to purchase another policyThat's a valid point. I need to research that a bit.
Those individuals should be included over and above the referenced 10% figure. Originally Posted by bigtex
Perhaps you meant Republicans.
I realize that in this free for all forum it is typical for comments to be misread at best or totally twisted out of proportion. The meaning of my statement was that in order for this fiasco to be self sustainable conservatives feel like the ACA needs to take in the same amount of money that it pays out. Administrative costs, of course, have to be taken into consideration. In response to your comment though. My definition of conservatism doesn't necessarily line up with the Republican party platform. There are maybe a handful of what I would consider Constitutional Conservatives in DC if that. Originally Posted by boardman
What is troubling about that 7 million (actually 6 million) threshold is that we don't and won't know for a while who is enrolled. For some reason pundits seem to agree that 6 million individuals is where enrollment would have to be to prevent any form of repeal. I guess they feel that is where the plan becomes sustainable but...Why do you expect 65 million people to sign up for health insurance in the individual market when there are only about 46 million who are uninsured? According to the projections by the CBO taken in March 2012 the number of uninsured is about 46 million in 2014. See Table 3 in the link.
65 Million people voted Democrat in the 2012 general election. 7 million have signed up for ACA. 10%. Ok some of the states have their own exchange so maybe it's 14 million that have signed up. Some of those are bound to be people who voted Republican though so for a good round number let's say that 10 million 2012 Democratic voters have signed up or about 1 in 6. Why haven't they all signed up. This is what they voted to keep. 60% of people 18-29 voted democrat but those don't appear to be the people signing up.
Here's where things get really fucked up. From video I saw at different places where people were standing in line it didn't appear to be young 20 somethings doing the waiting. Now maybe they are more computer savvy and signed up on line but I personally know several young people(25-35) that have chosen to pay the $95 fine next year rather than the $150/month premium. In three years that fine is projected to increase to around $700 but if young healthy people aren't signing up then taxes or "fines" will have to increase AND cost controls will have to be put in place. So sustainability is very subjective. Liberals would argue, I guess, that as long as the government can keep printing money and paying the bills it is sustainable. Conservatives feel like it should pay it's own way in order to be considered sustainable. The ride is just going to get bumpier and the fat cats in DC will find plenty of ways to keep getting fatter. Originally Posted by boardman
Yes, the clever response when faced with any statistic or fact that cuts against your argument.....LIES. ALL LIES!!!!The statistic is suspect. Even the Obama administration has admitted it doesn't know 1) how many people have paid and 2) how many people had insurance the previous year. When questioned about the first day of signup Sebelius didn't know how many people had signed up but it was reported that she knew the number was less than 200. Does anyone know of anyone who has signed up in the last month? I don't. I even asked my 20-something kids.
Dunce. Originally Posted by timpage
....My guess is more people actually drop out of Obamacare than that. Unless the insurance companies go to great lengths NOT to drop people for nonpayment.
My guess is that number is going to come in around 10%. I can't find any statistics on the percentage of people that don't pay their bills to compare that to. Originally Posted by boardman