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CBO


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2017 Mar 14, 1:47pm   2,453 views  4 comments

by CL   ➕follow (1)   💰tip   ignore  

Do we have evidence that it is usually right, or that it's usually wrong?

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1   CL   2017 Mar 14, 3:48pm  

Right, but I don't see any big black mark anywhere that indicates a poor track record.

2   FNWGMOBDVZXDNW   2017 Mar 14, 4:24pm  

The question should be how far off are they usually? A related question is who has a better track record?

3   Patrick   2017 Mar 14, 4:40pm  

Had too look it up:

https://www.cbo.gov

4   CL   2017 Mar 15, 8:21am  

So, that would logically mean that the GOP plan is even worse than projected, right? The projected savings will likely not materialize, and there will be even higher uninsured rates than currently being exposed.

Aside from PPACA (which is not a concession), when did they get it wrong before? We should have ample examples if they are perpetually wrong.

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