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New plan leaves 14m fewer insured in 2018: US budget office

- Health coverage premiums Tax credits

WASHINGTON: Fourteen million fewer Americans will have health insurance next year under the Republican plan to replace Obamacare, a nonpartisa­n congressio­nal analysis projected Monday, heaping pressure on President Donald Trump to make good on his pledge to broaden coverage.

By 2026 that number would shoot up to 24 million, the Congressio­nal Budget Office (CBO) said, largely because the bill would undo the Obamacare rule mandating people to have health insurance.

It also said that the measure currently before Congress — backed by Trump and House Speaker Paul Ryan — would reduce the federal deficit by $337 billion over the next decade.

Part of that reduction comes from the plan’s phase-out of the Medicaid expansion by 2020, which would save a massive $880 billion.

Average health coverage premiums would rise 15 to 20 percent in 2018 and 2019 for individual policyhold­ers, it said.

The projection was seen as a black eye on Trump’s repeal-and-replace plan, which already faced substantia­l opposition from within his own party over fears it would leave millions uninsured.

However the online magazine Politico, citing a White House document, reported that the executive’s own analysis forecast that 26 million people would lose coverage over the next decade, higher than the 24 million estimated by the CBO.

Trump and his inner circle neverthele­ss insist that the plan is a vast improvemen­t over Barack Obama’s signature health care reform — which many Republican­s say caused insurance costs to spike.

“We disagree strenuousl­y with the report that was put out,” said Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price.

He said the CBO gave an incomplete picture of the Republican plan, which includes future steps to deregulate the market and allow people to buy insurance across state lines.

For Democrats, the CBO report proves that the Republican plan is a disaster.

“‘Trumpcare’ would be a nightmare for the American people,” top Senate Democrat Chuck Schumer said, as he and House minority leader Nancy Pelosi urged Ryan to scrap the legislatio­n.

Ryan, however, gave an optimistic portrayal of the plan. “Our plan is not about forcing people to buy expensive, one-size-fits-all coverage. It is about giving people more choices and better access to a plan they want and can afford,” Ryan said.

Some conservati­ve Republican­s have argued that the proposal is too similar to Obamacare, while party moderates warn that it provides insufficie­nt funding to help millions retain or purchase coverage.

Trump campaigned for a full year on repealing and replacing Obamacare, repeatedly stating his desire for health care coverage for “everybody.”

But some Republican lawmakers were clearly worried.

“It is awful,” Sen. Bill Cassidy said of the CBO projection, according to the Washington Examiner.

Facing mounting concern about the plan, Trump met Monday with “victims of Obamacare” to highlight the Republican replacemen­t.

Asked before the CBO report was released whether he had a message to Americans who might lose coverage, Trump sounded upbeat. “If we are allowed to do what we want to do, it will get better. Much better,” he replied.

The GOP plan rolls back the expansion of the Medicaid health care program for the poor by 2020, replaces government subsidies with tax credits to help individual­s buy insurance and scraps Obamacare taxes.

It preserves two popular Obamacare provisions: Insurance companies cannot refuse coverage due to pre-existing conditions and dependents can remain on their parents’ insurance plan until age 26.

Under the Republican plan, premiums would begin decreasing by 2020, the CBO said, due to grants that could bump up tax credits to poor or working-class Americans, and because younger people would be projected to sign up for coverage.

 ??  ?? The GOP plan rolls back the expansion of the Medicaid health care program for the poor by 2020, replaces government subsidies with tax credits to help individual­s buy insurance and scraps Obamacare taxes. (Reuters)
The GOP plan rolls back the expansion of the Medicaid health care program for the poor by 2020, replaces government subsidies with tax credits to help individual­s buy insurance and scraps Obamacare taxes. (Reuters)

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