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Home Front: Politix
Obama health insurance: $1 trillion - CBO
2009-06-16
The Congressional Budget Office offers preliminary estimates of 2 key provisions in a bill from Democrats on the Senate health committee.

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Two key proposals to improve access to health insurance could reduce the ranks of the uninsured but cost $1 trillion over 10 years, according to preliminary estimates released Monday by the Congressional Budget Office.

The estimates are the first in a series over the next few months that will attempt to quantify the costs and benefits of various health reform options. President Obama, citing the huge part health care spending plays in the economy, has made passing reform this year a top priority.

The report by CBO, an independent agency that scores legislative proposals for lawmakers, focuses on proposals to create health insurance exchanges and subsidize the cost of insurance for some households.

The agency estimated that the exchange and subsidies could reduce the number of uninsured people by roughly 16 million by 2015. It is estimated there would otherwise be 51 million uninsured that year.

The CBO estimates are based on parts of a health reform bill from Democrats on the Senate's Health, Education, Labor and Pension Committee, chaired by Sen. Ted Kennedy, D-Mass.

The committee will start debating and amending that bill on Wednesday.

Under the bill, the federal government would give grants to states to set up insurance exchanges that consumers could use to comparison shop for health insurance. And it would offer subsidies of varying levels to help families with incomes up to 500% of poverty level (roughly $110,000) to pay for coverage.

The federal government would also subsidize small businesses that offer health benefits but have workers with low wages.

The CBO stressed that its estimates are preliminary for several reasons:

- They only reflect analysis of one part of the health committee bill. So they aren't a comprehensive look at the potential costs and savings of all measures in that bill.

- They do not reflect the likely interactions that will occur with other elements of comprehensive health reform that may be included -- such as an expansion of Medicaid or the creation of a public insurance plan, which is the most controversial issue in the health reform debate.

- In addition, the CBO has not yet finished its analysis of all the bill's elements, such as a proposal to let parents cover their children as dependents until they're 27.

The health committee bill is hardly the last word on health reform. Other congressional committees have jurisdiction over other parts of health care reform.

One is the Senate Finance Committee, which will oversee the tax proposals intended to help pay for the overhaul of the health care system.

The finance panel's chairman, Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., is expected to release a draft of his health reform bill this week.
Posted by:GolfBravoUSMC

#10  A new development today which illustrates part of the problem: An FDA advisory panel has recommended the FDA approve a new drug Krystexxa to treat severe gout in a way that had never been possible before. The drug directly breaks down uric acid and turns it into soluble/excretable metabolites. It is aimed at the approximately 50,000 Americans whose gout cannot be treated with other drugs. Clinical trials have indicated it will work for 40% of them. The drug has to be given intravenously every 2-4 weeks. It is estimated to cost tens of thousands of dollars per patient per year.
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418   2009-06-16 21:59  

#9  Remember when Obama was going to balance the budget?

I don't recall that, but I tend not to believe any of what he says at any given time.
Posted by: eLarson   2009-06-16 20:40  

#8  They are scum plain and simple. The biggest employer in all of Europe is that fool UK health services. Just pure evil.

If they touch this, I will wash my hands of DC forever. What was given may be taken away.
Posted by: newc   2009-06-16 18:10  

#7  $1.6 trillion and climbing. AP:
Senate sources say the latest cost estimates for health care legislation are around $1.6 trillion over 10 years. Two Senate staffers, one Democratic and one Republican, said Congressional Budget Office estimates put the cost of the Finance Committee version of the bill at around $1.6 trillion.

Remember when Obama was going to balance the budget?
Posted by: ed   2009-06-16 18:08  

#6  Can anyone read these estimates without laughing out loud? I confidently predict whatever plan Obama & the Dems launch will be a dog's breakfast. My less confident cost estimate is $1 Trillion a year, or until the US goes broke, whichever comes first. They really take us for idiots.
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418   2009-06-16 17:53  

#5  Under the department of kathleen "I'm gonna break the law to provide revenue" sebilius.

whitecollar redneck, gonna need a 30 grit with the brain-reaching attachment for your comment yesterday ;)
Posted by: swksvolFF   2009-06-16 17:21  

#4  low-ball trial balloon estimate I'm sure, $3 trillion today dollars.

Their egos' writing checks our bodies can't cash.
Posted by: swksvolFF   2009-06-16 17:18  

#3  this morning FoxNews also reported that that $1 trillion would only cover 1/3 of the uninsured, so you're really looking at $3 trillion + to cover all the uninsured
Posted by: Frank G   2009-06-16 16:48  

#2  Bankrupting the pubic treasury to buy indulgences for your personal sins and guilt by erecting monuments for your ego could well repeat history - ask the Catholic Church. Throw in the depth of corruption in the hierarchy and this is going to be one of those 'may you live in interesting times'. When you have no history other than from the time you were born, you'll be more likely to repeat fatal and regrettable mistakes others have learned and you have not.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2009-06-16 16:03  

#1  I think that's only Title I of the bill, too.
Posted by: Grenter, Protector of the Geats   2009-06-16 15:07  

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