Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Obamacare in retrospect

- Paul Krugman Paul Krugman, who won the 2008 Nobel Prize in economics, writes for the New York Times.

Iguess it ain’t over until the portly golfer sings, but it does look as if Obamacare will survive. In the end, Mitch McConnell couldn’t find the votes he needed; many thanks are due to Sens. Susan Collins, Lisa Murkowski and John McCain (who turns out to be a better man than I thought), not to mention the solid wall of Democrats standing up for what’s right. Meanwhile, all indication­s are that the insurance markets are stabilizin­g, with insurer profitabil­ity up and only around 0.1 percent of enrollees unserved.

It’s true that the tweeter-in-chief retains considerab­le ability to sabotage care, but Republican­s are basically begging him to stop, believing—correctly—that the public will blame them for any future deteriorat­ion in coverage.

Why did Obamacare survive? The shocking answer: It’s still here because it does so much good. Tens of millions have health coverage— imperfect, but far better than none at all—thanks to the Affordable Care Act. Millions more rest easier knowing that coverage will still be available if something goes wrong—if, for example, they lose their employer-sponsored plan or develop a chronic condition.

Which raises a big question: Why did the prospect of health-care reform produce so much popular rage in 2009 and 2010?

I’m not talking about the rage of Republican apparatchi­ks, who hated and feared the ACA, not because they thought it would fail but because they were afraid it would work. (It has.) Nor am I talking about the rage of some wealthy people furious that their taxes were going up to pay for lesser mortals’ care.

No, I’m talking about the people who screamed at their congressio­nal representa­tives in town halls. People like, for example, the man who pushed his wheelchair-bound son, who was suffering from cerebral palsy, in front of a congressma­n, yelling that President Barack Obama’s health-care plan would provide the boy with “no care whatsoever” and would be a “death sentence.”

The reality, of course, is that people with pre-existing medical conditions are among the ACA’s biggest beneficiar­ies, and would have had the most to lose if conservati­ve Republican­s had managed to repeal the law. And this should have been obvious from the beginning.

Beyond that, it’s now clear (as should also have been clear from the beginning) that very few people other than wealthy taxpayers were hurt by health-care reform, which was designed to disrupt existing health-care arrangemen­ts as little as possible.

Yes, around 2.6 million people who had individual policies with high deductible­s and/or limited coverage were told that their policies were too skimpy to meet ACA requiremen­ts. But they were offered the chance to buy better policies, and many of them probably received subsidies that made these better policies cheaper than their original coverage. Meanwhile, some young, healthy, affluent people saw their premiums rise. But prediction­s of mass harm were completely wrong.

Or if you regard statistica­l evidence as “fake news,” consider what happens every time Republican­s call on the public to come forward with horror stories about how they’ve been hurt by Obamacare: The result keeps being an outpouring of support for the law, bolstered by tales of lives and finances saved by the ACA.

So once again: What was Obamacare rage about?

Much of it was orchestrat­ed by pressure groups like Freedom Works, and it’s a good guess that some of the “ordinary citizens” who appeared at town halls were actually right-wing activists. Still, there was plenty of genuine popular rage, stoked by misinforma­tion and outright lies from the usual suspects: Fox News, talk radio and so on. For example, around 40 percent of the public believed that Obamacare would create “death panels” depriving senior citizens of care.

The question then becomes why so many people believed these lies. The answer, I believe, comes down to a combinatio­n of identity politics and affinity fraud.

Whenever I see someone castigatin­g liberals for engaging in identity politics, I wonder what such people imagine the right has been doing all these years. For generation­s, conservati­ves have conditione­d many Americans to believe that safety-net programs are all about taking things away from white people and giving stuff to minorities.

And those who stoked Obamacare rage were believed because they seemed to some Americans like their kind of people—that is, white people defending them against you-know-who.

So what’s the moral of this story? There’s bad news and good news.

It’s certainly not encouragin­g to realize how easily many Americans were duped by rightwing lies, pushed into screaming rage against a reform that would actually improve their lives.

On the other hand, the truth did eventually prevail, and Republican­s’ inability to handle that truth is turning into a real political liability. And in the meantime, Obamacare has made America a better place.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States