Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byKatelin Bolton Modified over 9 years ago
1
Health Reform After SCOTUS Nelson Mullins LLP July 20, 2012 Joseph R. Antos, Ph.D. Wilson H. Taylor Scholar in Health Care and Retirement Policy and Retirement Policy American Enterprise Institute
2
Do we really have to eat it? …and does it matter?
3
AEI Guaranteed issue, community rating without ~full participation → selection spiral IRS authority limited by ACA Behavioral economics vs. simple arithmetic Subsidized premiums = 2% to 9.5% of income (plus inflation plus “excess” premium growth in 2019+) 3 Year“Tax” 2014$95/1% of income 2015$325/2% of income 2016$695/2.5% of income 2017+2016 rate + inflation
4
A moot point? Can the federal exchange distribute subsidies? Will the federal exchange provide “1-stop shopping”? Is it a state exchange managed by the feds?
5
Medicaid typo? Exchange subsidies for 100-133% FPL? ◦ Premium = 2% of income ◦ Cost-sharing credits = 94% of plan value ◦ State cost = $0 ◦ Medicaid: State cost = 5% in 2017 → 10% in 2020+
6
AEI Lame duck, lamer than usual Romney: Repeal and replace? ◦ Reconciliation ◦ What goes, what stays under a new name? ◦ How much has already changed? ◦ Put health subsidies on a real budget Obama: The economy is in charge, not him ◦ Replay of Budget Control Act, but with teeth Major spending cuts—including Medicare, Medicaid, exchanges Reality that ACA is not ready for 2014 prime time Devolution to the States ◦ Difficult balance with short-term “stimulus” 6
7
7 Don’t worry… …Congress will work it out
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.