USA TODAY US Edition

32M MORE COULD BE UNINSURED

CBO also says Obamacare repeal plan would increase premiums

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Maureen Groppe @mgroppe USA TODAY

A bill the Senate plans to vote on next week to repeal parts of Obamacare without a replacemen­t would make the insurance market unstable, raise premiums and increase by 32 million the number of uninsured people, according to an analysis released Wednesday by the non-partisan Congressio­nal Budget Office.

While repealing billions of dollars in taxes imposed under Obamacare to pay for expanding health coverage to millions more Americans, the legislatio­n would still decrease deficits by $473 billion over 10 years be- cause of the spending reductions.

The repeal bill is similar to one approved by the House and Senate in 2015 but vetoed by then-president Barack Obama.

The legislatio­n would immediatel­y end the Affordable Care Act mandates for people to obtain insurance and employers to offer it and also scrap in 2020 the federal subsidies to help people pay for coverage. But it would keep the regulation­s on what insurers have to cover and the requiremen­t that they not turn down sick people seeking coverage or base premiums on their health status.

As a result, the pool of people buying insurance would be older and sicker, prompting insurers to increase premiums. Insurance plans could cost about 50% more right after subsidies are eliminated and could double in 10 years, the CBO estimated.

The White House and congressio­nal Republican­s have pushed back on CBO health care estimates as Congress has considered various proposals. Two White House officials penned an op-ed in The Washington Post last week warning that “the CBO’s methodolog­y, which favors mandates over choice and competitio­n, is fundamenta­lly flawed.”

CBO predicts that under the repeal proposal, faced with fewer customers with higher expenses, some insurers would likely stop selling plans.

About half the country could have no option in the first year after subsidies are eliminated. After 10 years, three out of four Americans might not be able to

buy a plan on the individual market, according to the CBO. “That’s a true death spiral,” tweeted Larry Levitt, senior vice president at the Kaiser Family Foundation.

The bill would also end in two years the extra federal funding the ACA made available to states to expand eligibilit­y for Medicaid to those earning slightly more than the poverty level. But unlike the bill the House passed and the Senate was unable to bring up, a repeal bill would not reduce federal support for traditiona­l Medicaid.

Still, the rollback of Medicaid expansion is expected to significan­tly increase the number of people without health insurance.

CBO concludes that because of both the Medicaid cuts and eliminatio­n of private insurance subsidies for people who don’t get coverage through an employer, the number of people who are uninsured would rise by 32 million in 10 years.

By 2026, about 21% of Americans under age 65 could be without insurance, compared with a projected 10% if the ACA remains in place.

Republican­s say the bill’s twoyear delay before the insurance subsidies and Medicaid funding are repealed would give Congress time to come up with an alternativ­e program. But they have so far been unable to agree on what that might be. Two versions of a bill that would repeal parts of the the ACA and change some other provisions have not won enough GOP support to move to the floor over the past several weeks. Those bills would also result in millions more Americans not having insurance, according to CBO estimates.

GOP leadership still had not decided Wednesday which version of the bill would be voted on next week, but Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R- Ky., contended that it would be better to pass an overhaul than a straight repeal. Vice President Pence headed to Capitol Hill on Wednesday night to huddle with Republican senators to see whether a deal on a repeal-andreplace bill could be worked out.

“I think we all agree it’s better to both repeal and replace, but we could have a vote on either,” McConnell said at the White House on Wednesday. It is not clear McConnell has enough Republican support to bring a repeal-only bill to the floor, as three of the 52 GOP senators have already said they would oppose even debating such a bill and agreement by 50 senators is required to bring up any v measure.

Calling the latest version “repeal and run,” Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer, D - N.Y., said the CBO analysis shows it’s a horrible idea.

“President Trump and Republican­s have repeatedly promised to lower premiums and increase coverage, yet each proposal they offer would do the opposite,” Schumer said in a statement.

Like the earlier versions, the bill would block Planned Parenthood from receiving Medicaid funding for a year. The federal government already prevents Medicaid patients from receiving abortion services. But the bill would also block them from using Planned Parenthood for contracept­ion, testing for and treatment of sexually transmitte­d diseases, and other services.

“I think we all agree it’s better to both repeal and replace, but we could have a vote on either.” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky.

 ?? MICHAEL REYNOLDS, EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY ?? Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell delivers remarks on health care to the news media outside the White House following a lunch with President Trump on Wednesday.
MICHAEL REYNOLDS, EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell delivers remarks on health care to the news media outside the White House following a lunch with President Trump on Wednesday.

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