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How's that Obamacare working out?


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2013 Apr 25, 2:13am   14,156 views  65 comments

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http://www.politico.com/story/2013/04/obamacare-exemption-lawmakers-aides-90610.html

Congressional leaders in both parties are engaged in high-level, confidential talks about exempting lawmakers and Capitol Hill aides from the insurance exchanges they are mandated to join as part of President Barack Obama’s health care overhaul, sources in both parties said. The talks — which involve Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.), House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio), the Obama administration and other top lawmakers — are extraordinarily sensitive, with both sides acutely aware of the potential for political fallout from giving carve-outs from the hugely controversial law to 535 lawmakers and thousands of their aides. Discussions have stretched out for...

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15   curious2   2013 Apr 25, 3:45pm  

Homeboy says

Hillary Care never passed.

Related programs did, including CHIP, which enabled PhRMA to get more of its pills into American children. It's true though that Bill Clinton had the presence of mind to drop the all-encompassing takeover when he saw people hated it. If only the current POTUS had some of that caution, we might have got something worthwhile.

Homeboy says

A family of 4 making $25K would be on Medicare.

Umm, no, Obamacare actually takes money out of Medicare, and Obama proposes to reduce Medicare further. Proposals to broaden Medicare (e.g. "Medicare for all") were rejected by the Democrats who enacted Obamacare.

16   Homeboy   2013 Apr 25, 6:46pm  

adarmiento says

What about the individual that makes $100,000 per year in New York City? That is certainly not rich in that part of the country. What is the impact on his or her health insurance premiums ?

Median income in Manhattan is about $67,000. Maybe $100,000 isn't "rich", but it's certainly far above average, and most definitely isn't poor. I would wager that most people who make over $100K get health insurance through their employer. Those who don't are going to have to get it through the exchanges, and won't get the low-income subsidy. I believe you do get a tax deduction for self-employment healthcare premiums, though. So what will happen to premiums? So far, they have continued to go up, but at a slower pace than before ACA, so obviously ACA isn't the cause of rising premiums. The "impact" so far is that out of control rises in healthcare premiums have been scaled back. What will happen in the future? We'll just have to wait and see.

17   anotheraccount   2013 Apr 25, 6:53pm  

Homeboy says

So what will happen to premiums? So far, they have continued to go up, but at a slower pace than before ACA, so obviously ACA isn't the cause of rising premiums. The "impact" so far is that out of control rises in healthcare premiums have been scaled back.

Where are you getting your data on premiums? I've looked at places like S&P, but their data does not seem to agree to what I see happening to small business premiums which are rising out of control even in 2013.

18   Homeboy   2013 Apr 25, 6:54pm  

CaptainShuddup says

Pelosi or Regan?

alright no funny stuff, I'll post pictures of them both at a similar age.

Actually, Pelosi doesn't look half bad. That other broad looks plastic, like her face would crack if you touched it. Probably a half gallon of spackle troweled on there.

How about the two of them having a pillow fight in their undies that ends up in a makeout session?

19   Homeboy   2013 Apr 25, 6:59pm  

treatmentreport says

I've looked at places like S&P, but their data does not seem to agree to what I see happening to small business premiums which are rising out of control even in 2013.

If you have data showing that healthcare premiums are rising FASTER than they were rising before ACA, by all means post it. Everything I've read says that's not true. Just saying it's "out of control" doesn't mean anything to me, since it was out of control BEFORE ACA.

20   anotheraccount   2013 Apr 27, 2:13am  

Homeboy says

Just saying it's "out of control" doesn't mean anything to me

I am asking you for your data sources because "everything I've read" does not mean anything to me.

I run a business and have to pay healthcare premiums for employees, Premiums nearly doubled since 2008. I would say that's out of control. And yes it was out of control prior to 2008, but the point is that it has not gotten better.

21   Homeboy   2013 Apr 27, 8:29am  

treatmentreport says

I am asking you for your data sources because "everything I've read" does not mean anything to me

I'm asking you for YOUR data. You go first.

treatmentreport says

I run a business and have to pay healthcare premiums for employees, Premiums nearly doubled since 2008. I would say that's out of control.

ACA was passed in 2010.

treatmentreport says

And yes it was out of control prior to 2008, but the point is that it has not gotten better.

Oh, so when you lose the argument, you just retroactively change what you "point" is? Nice.

Just once, I'd love to see someone who bags on Obamacare actually come up with even a single FACT to back it up.

22   anotheraccount   2013 Apr 27, 9:31am  

Homeboy says

Just once, I'd love to see someone who bags on Obamacare actually come up with even a single FACT to back it up.

I am stating a fact that my business healthcare premiums have not seen any relief because of ACA (nothing changed since 2010). You are ignoring this data point completely.

I am also telling you that it's difficult to find good reliable source to show healthcare prices and premiums. One indicator that I watch is how well healthcare stocks have outperformed many other sectors in the market. This is telling me that my anecdotal evidence has value.

24   anotheraccount   2013 Apr 27, 9:41am  

The above data is much more consistent with my anecdotal evidence. If you look at the commercial index, it's rising pretty fast. Most likely large businesses are better able to negotiate their rates and small businesses under 25 employees have very little negotiating power.

25   Homeboy   2013 Apr 27, 1:03pm  

treatmentreport says

I am stating a fact that my business healthcare premiums have not seen any relief because of ACA (nothing changed since 2010). You are ignoring this data point completely.

I am also telling you that it's difficult to find good reliable source to show healthcare prices and premiums. One indicator that I watch is how well healthcare stocks have outperformed many other sectors in the market. This is telling me that my anecdotal evidence has value.

The plural of anecdote is not data.

26   anotheraccount   2013 Apr 27, 1:09pm  

Homeboy says

The plural of anecdote is not data

That's all you can say? I gave you both anecdotal evidence and S&P healthcare inflation indices. Is that not enough for you to even consider that you may be wrong?

27   Homeboy   2013 Apr 27, 1:21pm  

treatmentreport says

Here is some data from S&P that shows that healthcare inflation is very high. Look at the increase of the growth rate since ACA passed.

I honestly can't make heads or tails out of what you think that chart is supposed to be showing.

Here are health insurance premiums over time:

As you can see, Obamacare was not the cause of rising premiums, since the rate of increase was LOWER the year Obamacare passed.

Year: 2000 Rate of increase: 11%
2001 10%
2002 13%
2003 13%
2004 10%
2005 9%
2006 6%
2007 5%
2008 5%
2009 5%
2010 3%

You don't think a 3% increase is an improvement over the 13% increases we had in the early 2000s? I just don't get how anyone can look at data like this and conclude that Obamacare is the reason for a problem that existed years before the law was even written.

28   Homeboy   2013 Apr 27, 1:24pm  

treatmentreport says

Is that not enough for you to even consider that you may be wrong?

I always consider that I may be wrong, but since I have posted actual data, and you have posted a chart that frankly doesn't make any sense, coupled with anecdotes and your "gut feeling", I am not ready to conclude that I am wrong at this point.

29   Homeboy   2013 Apr 27, 1:32pm  

treatmentreport says

The above data is much more consistent with my anecdotal evidence. If you look at the commercial index, it's rising pretty fast. Most likely large businesses are better able to negotiate their rates and small businesses under 25 employees have very little negotiating power.

Actually, no. The commentary on that very page says that the growth rate is DEcelerating. Did you even read the article you linked to?

“The past two months have generally been marked by a deceleration in the annual rate of change in
health care costs. In June 2012, all nine of our Healthcare Indices’ annual growth rates decelerated
from their May 2012 rates,” says David M. Blitzer, Chairman of the Index Committee at S&P Dow
Jones Indices. “In May, six of the nine indices we publish also saw a deceleration in their annual
growth rates from April. In June, the Composite Index posted an annual rate of +5.78%, the
Commercial Index +8.09% and the Medicare Index +2.27%. These rates were all down from their
respective April and May 2012 levels.

30   anotheraccount   2013 Apr 27, 2:44pm  

Homeboy says

Actually, no. The commentary on that very page says that the growth rate is DEcelerating. Did you even read the article you linked to?

Two months of deceleration after a couple of years of acceleration. Read the entire article.

How does the chart from S&P not make sense? It breaks healthcare inflation by sectors (commercial, medicare, etc) and shows the rate of change for the last eight years.

Kaiser data stops in 2010. I bet it would show much larger increases for 2011 and 2012. Also, what is the sample size of Kaiser data and how large of employers do they sample?

If ACA was really meant to work, we should see premiums go down not up. If someone told you in 2008 after Obama's victory that it's all we are going to get as far as healthcare reform is concerned, you would have been disappointed.

31   anotheraccount   2013 Apr 27, 2:51pm  

Does the Kaiser survey take in account rising deductibles and co pays?

We've consistently increased deductibles to limit premium increases.

S&P data looks at both.

32   AD   2013 Apr 27, 2:55pm  

Homeboy says

I just don't get how anyone can look at data like this and conclude that Obamacare is the reason for a problem that existed years before the law was even written.

We will see if premiums will rise for those individuals that make $60,000 to $120,000 a year under Obamacare. There may be enough independent and luke-warm Dem voters in this category who will never again vote Democrat because of their premiums going up.

33   AD   2013 Apr 27, 2:56pm  

treatmentreport says

Does the Kaiser survey take in account rising deductibles and co pays?

Excellent point. Pass on more costs to the consumer while charging the same amount for insurance coverage. I think that will be the mantra starting in 2014.

34   Homeboy   2013 Apr 27, 4:05pm  

treatmentreport says

Two months of deceleration after a couple of years of acceleration.

I see a line that goes up and down. How is that "a couple years of acceleration"?

Why do you post the rate of change graph? There's another graph below it that simply shows the index value. Much easier to comprehend. The commercial index line is a relatively steady increase, and the economic and medicare indices are slowing in their rates of increase. And all 3 have now slowed the rate of increase considerably, as it says in the commentary that you conveniently left out of your previous post.

treatmentreport says

How does the chart from S&P not make sense? It breaks healthcare inflation by sectors (commercial, medicare, etc) and shows the rate of change for the last eight years.

Two of the lines zigzag all over the place, and the third is mostly a steady decline. What is it you think that proves?

treatmentreport says

If ACA was really meant to work, we should see premiums go down not up. If someone told you in 2008 after Obama's victory that it's all we are going to get as far as healthcare reform is concerned, you would have been disappointed.

Well if you were being honest, you would have STARTED OUT being clear on what your point is. Apparently you are conceding that Obamacare hasn't caused premiums to go up, and your only complaint is that it hasn't made premiums go DOWN. So far, Obamacare has succeeded in getting healthcare for children who formerly had to go without, and has helped thousands with pre-existing conditions who couldn't get insurance before. And that is before the main parts of the law have even taken effect. Next year, millions will be insured who were not insured before, and low to middle income Americans will receive tax credits to help them afford insurance. If your only complaint is that rates didn't immediately get cut in half, before the main part of the law is even in effect, it's still a win.

Like I've said before, I'd rather have a single-payer system or a completely subsidized system like the successful systems in most other countries. But the republicans wouldn't let that happen here. It's a miracle we got any change at all.

35   Homeboy   2013 Apr 27, 4:08pm  

adarmiento says

We will see if premiums will rise for those individuals that make $60,000 to $120,000 a year under Obamacare. There may be enough independent and luke-warm Dem voters in this category who will never again vote Democrat because of their premiums going up

Oh, I see. You are Nostradamus. We will see what we will see. Don't forget that many in that income range will receive tax credits. People who make $120K won't get any tax credits. Do I feel sorry for them? Not really. They can afford it.

36   Homeboy   2013 Apr 27, 4:09pm  

adarmiento says

There may be enough independent and luke-warm Dem voters in this category who will never again vote Democrat because of their premiums going up.

If the republicans ever come up with a candidate who isn't a complete douchebag.

37   Homeboy   2013 Apr 27, 4:10pm  

adarmiento says

Excellent point. Pass on more costs to the consumer while charging the same amount for insurance coverage. I think that will be the mantra starting in 2014.

Wrong again. Out of pocket expenses are explicitly capped under ACA. So-called "catastrophic" policies will not be allowed.

38   Vicente   2013 Apr 27, 6:06pm  

"Sources in both parties said" could mean nothing. Let's say I'm some aide with little real power and a lot of fears, hanging out in a DC bar griping and thinking out loud and some reporter overhears that. Who knows, since the story veers all over the place badly.

The "brain drain" fear seems complete bullshit. We all know the point of DC for aides is as a stepping stone to some lobbying job anyway. So they suck it up and accept the low Federal pay & benefits no matter what.

39   anotheraccount   2013 Apr 28, 2:34am  

Homeboy,

You are blindly defending ObamaCare. Yes, it has some good parts, but it barely addresses the cost issue (there is 10B in it to study per patient instead of per procedure procedure payments). People like myself are bearing the cost increases. For example, my family could be making another house payment with our premium for a high deductible plan.

Again, if it was the reform that many expected in 2008, we would see premiums going down at this point.

40   Homeboy   2013 Apr 28, 4:24am  

treatmentreport says

You are blindly defending ObamaCare. Yes, it has some good parts, but it barely addresses the cost issue (there is 10B in it to study per patient instead of per procedure procedure payments). People like myself are bearing the cost increases. For example, my family could be making another house payment with our premium for a high deductible plan.

Again, if it was the reform that many expected in 2008, we would see premiums going down at this point.

Bullshit. I'm not "blindly defending" it. I'm saying that the problems you complain about are not the result of ACA. If it hasn't made things worse, and has made some improvement in some areas, I don't understand how you can complain about it. Are you saying we would be better off if the law had not been passed? Please explain how we would be better off with no ACA.

Your only complaint seems to be that YOUR rates have risen. Do you understand that there is a provision in the law that requires everyone to buy insurance, and that provision has not taken effect yet? Do you understand that the reason that provision was put there was that the system wouldn't be economically feasible without it? Right now, there are still millions of freeloaders in the system - people who do not have any health insurance. Right now, YOU ARE PAYING FOR THESE PEOPLE TO BE ABLE TO GO WITHOUT INSURANCE. Starting in 2014, they will have to contribute. IF, next year, it becomes clear that rates are skyrocketing beyond the rate they were skyrocketing before the law, I will admit the law is a failure. But will the law's detractors be honest and include the subsidy that rate-payers get when they calculate the average premium? So far, republicans are not being honest at all - for example Sen. Richard Burr claiming that someone making $25K a year would have a "$7000 a year healthcare tab", when the law clearly states that such a person would only be responsible for $1,726.

So would you mind explaining to me how it is that you are criticizing a system that isn't even in effect yet?

41   drew_eckhardt   2013 Apr 28, 8:33am  

CaptainShuddup says

Please don't, I want Obamacare in all of its glory mostly Warts and all, to go live in 2014. We really need a Republican President in 2016 to turn things around.

Right, because Republicans are opposed to $1T per 10 year tax funnels to the health care industry

First the Democrats brought us Medicare Part D.

Now they give us Obamacare.

Oh wait.... Medicare Part D was sponsored by speaker Dennis Hastert (R), sheparded through the process by Billy Tauzin (R), was passed by the Republican controlled house, was passed by the Republican controlled senate, and was signed into law by Republican George W. Bush.

Hmm, maybe the political parties aren't the common factor.

PhRMA (The PHarmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America) was so happy with Billy Tauzin's performance on Medicare Part D that they made him their president with a seven figure salary.

PhRMA threw in some drug discounts to get a seat at the negotiating table for Obamacare, limited the impact on their profit margins, and then paid for a $150 advertising campaign to pass the bill with the mandatory coverage and government subsidies bringing them millions of new customers.

The Republicans and Democrats are two sides of the same counterfeit corporatist coin. While the people might get something (help buying drugs from for profit companies for senior citizens, help for the less fortunate buying medical insurance from for profit companies which then pay for profit companies for care) as a side effect significant legislation is more about enriching corporatist interests (the same thing happens with corn farmers, defense contractors, mortgage bankers, etc.).

42   AD   2013 Apr 28, 8:48am  

Homeboy says

Don't forget that many in that income range will receive tax credits.

Wrong ! This is a classic example of how the liberals lie. Read the damn law (to paraphrase Senator Allan Simpson)!

It only subsidizes individuals making up to 400 % of the poverty limit, which is about $45,000 ! That is not within the range of $60,000 to $100,000. Read section 1402 about this.

SEC. 1402. REDUCED COST-SHARING FOR INDIVIDUALS ENROLLING IN QUALIFIED HEALTH PLANS

ref: http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Patient_Protection_and_Affordable_Care_Act/Title_I/Subtitle_E/Part_I/Subpart_A

43   AD   2013 Apr 28, 9:09am  

I think liberals want to come out and say anybody making $65,000 to $100,000 a year and has no children is labeled as being "rich" even if they live in expensive places like NY or Boston. It is just that they don't want to blow their cover and goal of trying to get those in that category to become poorer. They want to destroy the middle class just as much as the Republicans!

44   Homeboy   2013 Apr 28, 12:14pm  

adarmiento says

Wrong ! This is a classic example of how the liberals lie. Read the damn law (to paraphrase Senator Allan Simpson)!

It only subsidizes individuals making up to 400 % of the poverty limit, which is about $45,000 ! That is not within the range of $60,000 to $100,000. Read section 1402 about this.

How perfectly disingenuous of you. It's true that a single person with no family who makes $60,000 wouldn't get a subsidy, but A FAMILY OF FOUR making $60,000 would be at 256% of the poverty level, and would get a tax credit for any premium costs beyond $4,937.

I'll give you credit for actually knowing something about the law, which 99% of the whiners on Patnet don't, but I'm taking away the credit since you were disingenuous. A family of 4 is usually the metric used in the media, so it should have been obvious that's what I was referring to. Just because two people are talking about different things doesn't mean one of them is "lying".

45   Homeboy   2013 Apr 28, 12:18pm  

adarmiento says

I gave you some examples like the elimination of the tax holiday which resulted in paying more for social security

You do know that the payroll tax holiday was never intended to be anything other than a temporary measure, right? The word "holiday" should have been your first clue.

46   AD   2013 Apr 28, 12:19pm  

Homeboy says

How perfectly disingenuous of you. It's true that a single person with no family who makes $60,000 wouldn't get a subsidy, but A FAMILY OF FOUR making $60,000 would be at 256% of the poverty level, and would get a tax credit for any premium costs beyond $4,937.

So will that single person who makes $60,000 end up paying more under Obamacare? Or will we have to wait and see when it is too late to reverse the damage ? You do set the bar real low by referring to a family of 4 that makes $60,000 especially if it applies to a family living in the San Francisco bay area.

47   AD   2013 Apr 28, 12:20pm  

Homeboy says

You do know that the payroll tax holiday was never intended to be anything other than a temporary measure, right? The word "holiday" should have been your first clue.

Nice try, but I answered the question in regards to what has changed since 2008 in regards to tax policy for those within the $60,000 to $100,000 bracket.

48   Homeboy   2013 Apr 28, 12:32pm  

adarmiento says

So will that single person who makes $60,000 end up paying more under Obamacare? Or will we have to wait and see when it is too late to reverse the damage ?

Guess we'll have to wait and see, won't we? So far, ACA hasn't resulted in the catastrophic explosion of rates all the doom and gloomers predicted, so your entire premise is based on a guess, isn't it?

adarmiento says

You do set the bar real low by referring to a family of 4 that makes $60,000 especially if it applies to a family living in the San Francisco bay area.

Families of 4 will be subsidized up to $93,000 of income. As you said, read the damn law. LOL.

49   Homeboy   2013 May 7, 11:01am  

treatmentreport says

I am asking you for your data sources because "everything I've read" does not mean anything to me.

Here is a data source. According to this article, the annual growth rate in medical spending fell from 8.8% to 3%. So do you believe me yet, or are you going to come up with some more bullshit as to how the facts are "wrong"?

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-05-06/health-spending-slowdown-may-last-as-habits-show-change.html

50   anotheraccount   2013 May 7, 2:43pm  

Homeboy says

So do you believe me yet, or are you going to come up with some more bullshit as to how the facts are "wrong"?

Conveniently, the data stops in 2011. Here is the actual study and not the Bloomberg article: http://content.healthaffairs.org/content/32/5/835.abstract?=right

Why not include 2012 data? If you look at S&P chart that I provided, you can see what happens in 2012.

51   Homeboy   2013 May 7, 5:10pm  

treatmentreport says

Conveniently, the data stops in 2011. Here is the actual study and not the Bloomberg article: http://content.healthaffairs.org/content/32/5/835.abstract?=right

Why not include 2012 data? If you look at S&P chart that I provided, you can see what happens in 2012.

Yep, I knew you would refuse to accept the truth.

2012 data probably was not complete when they did the study. You seem to be implying it was deliberately left out as some sort of conspiracy. That's laughable.

Your "chart" is not complete either. It does not include the year 2012; only half of it. Here's the difference: The report shows the annual growth rate over two years, compared to the growth rate over the previous 10 years, which is meaningful. Whereas your "chart" takes a completely arbitrary data point, i.e. June 2012, and compares it to another single data point, June 2011. That tells us nothing. It is quite obvious from looking at your "chart" that the YOY rate of change fluctuates wildly. The only data that is at all meaningful is that which is averaged over a longer period of time. It's interesting that you are taking the June-to-June change, which is only halfway through 2012, IGNORING the entire second half of 2012, including that fact that the graph is heading DOWN at the end, and claim you are making some sort of sense. That's the absolute worst kind of data cherry-picking. And then for you to make the outrageous claim that the data from my link is incomplete, is absurd.

52   FortWayne   2013 May 8, 1:46am  

Next year will be interesting. Implementation is this year, so you'll see next year which way businesses are going.

My thought is that they'll start dumping employees onto exchanges.

53   anotheraccount   2013 May 8, 2:08am  

Homeboy says

Yep, I knew you would refuse to accept the truth.

Wow! You are still telling me that S&P data is not credible. It goes back at least ten years; don't just look at the chart, look at the website link I provided.

54   anotheraccount   2013 May 8, 2:13am  

Homeboy,

Can you explain why healthcare companies are outperforming the general market? Is it because they are going to make less?

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