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Republicans Don’t Want You to Know That Obamacare Is Working
There’s a subtle story going around this week that you definitely won’t see covered on Fox News. You won’t hear Speaker John Boehner or Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell discussing these results in their usual rote talking points about Obamacare and the socialist takeover of the country by the President’s policies. Between all the baying about the deficit, the budget and the huge negative impacts of the upcoming sequestration plan that will be implemented in the absence of fiscal resolution, if you blinked, you could almost miss the headline:
Slower Growth of Health Costs Eases U.S. Deficit
The New York Times ran this piece on Monday morning, and to be fair, it might have been difficult for anyone to focus what with Benedict XVI’s stunning announcement that he would be the first Pope in six centuries to resign his post. There’s also the President’s first State of the Union Address since winning re-election in 2012. It has undoubtedly been a busy news cycle and that will likely continue as we move through the week.
But come on! This is a big deal!According to the piece by writer Annie Lowrey, “A sharp and surprisingly persistent slowdown in the growth of health care costs is helping to narrow the federal deficit, leaving budget experts trying to figure out whether the trend will last and how much the slower growth could help alleviate the country’s long-term fiscal problems.”
Excuse me for asking this obvious, but isn’t this precisely what both political parties claim to be after? Going back to the 2008 Presidential campaign, then candidates John McCain and Barack Obama devoted near equal time to lamenting the spiraling costs of healthcare and its affect on deficit spending. Both men vowed to do something if elected. It seemed to be an issue that most Americans and politicos could get behind.
Then low and behold, early into his first term, Obama and the Democrats actually got something accomplished – with the GOP fighting them every step of the way. It wasn’t pretty. It was embarrassing and painful for almost everybody, and the end result was a far cry from the single payer system that many liberals badly desired. But in the end the Patient Protection and the Affordable Care Act was a huge pivot away from a throughly broken system that seemed to exist for the benefit of health insurance companies, rather than the sick and injured they were created to serve.
Republicans wasted no time decrying the Act as the largest increase in government bureaucracy since ___ (fill in the blank), a measure that would drive medical costs and the Federal deficit up rather than down. Through it all, Obama held steady, confident that history would have the final say.
It didn’t even take a leap year. Lowrey goes on to write, “In figures released last week, the Congressional Budget Office said it had erased hundreds of billions of dollars in projected spending on Medicare and Medicaid. The budget office now projects that spending on those two programs in 2020 will be about $200 billion, or 15 percent, less than it projected three years ago.”
President Obama is way too gracious a person to perform the “I told you so dance” on Capitol Hill to which he is richly entitled. So I will do it for him. BOOM!!! How’s that for change you can believe?
Here’s hoping the President and his team use this data to their advantage, to head naysayers and sycophants off at the pass who stand to gain much by protecting the status quo. As the POTUS seeks to take on a host of issues this calendar year that seem to draw crazies out of the woodwork (I’m thinking gun control and immigration), let this early data from the effects of health care reform empower him to keep doing what is right.
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Reynardine
Feb. 13th, 2013 at 12:15 pm
It is clear that what now passes for the GOP has taken on the characteristics of a sociopath: lie, cheat, do anything you want to get anything you want and no one else counts. Too bad.
djchefron(Moderator)
Feb. 13th, 2013 at 2:06 pm
It didnt say,but I bet you a dollar if cost were rising it would be the Presidents fault.Its called politics and legacy building.So I have no problem for giving the President credit.
Kimbutgar
Feb. 13th, 2013 at 2:42 pm
Lie lie
cheat cheat
steal steal
That’s the republican way! Yea!
Joe C
Feb. 13th, 2013 at 3:05 pm
While I do think that one of the purposes of Obamacare was to drive down healthcare costs skimming through the article I don’t see any mention of a correlation between the Affordabable Care Act and the reduction in healthcare spending.
Did I miss something?
Matthew M
Feb. 13th, 2013 at 5:16 pm
While this is only an individual case, last year my grandmother’s medication cost about $70-$80, now they only cost about $45, even though the actual cost of the medication (without insurance) went up (presumably because the pharma companies drove their prices up so their CEOs wouldn’t have to take a 3% paycut to pay the Obamacare costs.
charlie
Feb. 13th, 2013 at 6:50 pm
Joe CReply
Feb. 13th, 2013 at 3:05 pm
__________________________
Some people think the slowdown is permanent, while others argue it’s temporary, a product of Americans cutting back on health care during the recession. The CBO itself has not taken a side.
Also, a future decrease in Medicare spending is contingent upon the continuation of Obamacare’s $716 billion in Medicare cuts….which is unlikely.
Lowering provider reimbursement rates to Obamacare’s levels will have a severe impact on seniors’ ability to access care. Congress is likely to override these cuts much like they do with Medicare physician payment rates each year.
mjh
Feb. 16th, 2013 at 2:32 pm
“Also, a future decrease in Medicare spending is contingent upon the continuation of Obamacare’s $716 billion in Medicare cuts….which is unlikely.” — charlie
—–
EARTH TO CHARLIE:
There is NO $716 billion Medicare cut . . . repeat . . . There is NO $716 billion Medicare cut . . . repeat . . . There is NO $716 billion Medicare cut . . .
www.politifact.com/truth-...
.
bluerose
Feb. 13th, 2013 at 9:29 pm
i lie, i cheat, i steal….im a republican. LMAO
Rutesperanza
Feb. 16th, 2013 at 11:05 am
That’s funny. My insurance went up 80$ every two weeks. I’m not rich and evil but I do have a job so I guess that makes me rich and evil and worthy of needing to pay my fair share. I’m also paying down student loans, attending school and buying my own food. Oh and my parents are on food stamps… But I will never accept a penny from the US govt. I will work so they don’t have to accept help much longer either.
Tell me again how this opinion piece from the New York Times proves that Health Care costs went down? Is that before the Medical Device Tax takes place in 2014? Im in health Care and companies are bracing and prices WILL rise after that tax. Projecting future savings is as predictable as planning what you will spend on Gasoline next year.
Shiva(Moderator)
Feb. 16th, 2013 at 11:15 am
Bullshit. $80 every two weeks? No matter what, raises in healthcare costs are not allowed to do that.
djchefron(Moderator)
Feb. 16th, 2013 at 11:15 am
So if your insurance went up 80 dollars every 2 weeks you must be owing your employer.GTFO with that bullshit.
Rutesperanza
Feb. 16th, 2013 at 11:17 am
Went up 80$ every two weeks. As in I pay 160$ more a month. So I don’t owe my employer. Fortunately I make more than 160$ a month. I have Cigna Great West if anyone wants to make sure.
djchefron(Moderator)
Feb. 16th, 2013 at 11:22 am
There is a remedy for that.Join us for single payer,medicare for all whatever you want to call it.What do health insurance companies have to do with your health?
Shiva(Moderator)
Feb. 16th, 2013 at 11:25 am
Lets see, does your employer offer health insurance and you dont take it? You do realize the odds are your insurance didnt go up, your employer is just paying less.
GeneK1953
Feb. 18th, 2013 at 1:32 pm
The cost of healthcare is not the same thing as the cost of health insurance. When the cost of healthcare is going down but the cost of your insurance is going up, then that’s your employer covering less of your insurance, the profits of the insurance company going up or both, all at your expense. Because we don’t have a single payer system that controls what healthcare costs YOU.
Pogonip
Feb. 16th, 2013 at 7:55 pm
Insurance rates are starting to come down, following the rebate checks insurers were obliged to issue last year. www.californiahealthline....