The Painter
Banned
- Joined
- Apr 17, 2006
- Messages
- 2,654
It's cheaper in every country where it's free.
Well if it's "free", of course that's cheaper. Can you tell me what country has "free" health care? Or is this some kind of attempt at humor?
It's cheaper in every country where it's free.
Well if it's "free", of course that's cheaper. Can you tell me what country has "free" health care? Or is this some kind of attempt at humor?
But CATO is not “running the numbers”. CATO is distorting the numbers. They just added up everything that might conceivably be considered a “cost”, systematically ignored anything that might be either revenue or savings, and declared that the program will “cost” six trillion dollars.
Evidently you do didn't even bother to read the OP post before responding. Because that is not how they arrived at the 6 trillion dollar figure.
They arrived at the 6 trillion figure by adjusting for two gimmicks in the democrat/CBO *analysis*. One is that the true cost of the program over a ten year period must be the cost over a period where the program is fully up and running. It shouldn't include years when the program is just collecting taxes but not expending money at the full up and running levels.
When democrats started Medicare back in 1967, they predicted the program would cost about $12 billion in 1990. In 1990, however, it actually cost $110 billion ... a factor of 10 greater
Nope, didn't read the rest. I stopped at the fail right there. Why doesn't that money count? It's not really money?
Of course, a factor of 6 out of that was underestimating inflation, so the actual cost increase, according to BAC's link, was 165%.
I'm willing to bet that all of that could be accounted for by greater than expected growth in life expectancy. Curiously, the link didn't compare actual life span in 1990, versus the life span used in the 1967 estimate.
Myth #2: Seniors' life expectancy has increased because of Medicare.
Fact: Supporters of Medicare often overlook the very important fact that average life expectancy had been increasing in the United States long before Medicare and Medicaid were enacted in 1965. In fact, average life expectancy in the United States increased from 47.3 years to 69.7 years between 1900 and 1960.4 It is important to note that life expectancy was low in the early 1900s primarily because of high infant mortality rates, making the overall life expectancy rate appear low. However, in the early 1900s, those who reached age 60 typically lived another ten years or more. The bottom line is that life expectancy for seniors had been increasing nearly every decade for 65 years (1900 to 1965) prior to the enactment of Medicare. Thus, we can't attribute the increases in seniors' life expectancy to Medicare.
Go on claiming that money doesn't count when it's collected as taxes during times you say don't count. It's funny.
http://www.forhealthfreedom.org/Publications/MedicareMedicaid/RxDrugPlan.html
Thus, we can't attribute the increases in seniors' life expectancy to Medicare.
Well if it's "free", of course that's cheaper. Can you tell me what country has "free" health care? Or is this some kind of attempt at humor?
And this is absurd. You can't just ignore the first 4 years of the program to calculate the net cost.They arrived at the 6 trillion figure by adjusting for two gimmicks in the democrat/CBO *analysis*. One is that the true cost of the program over a ten year period must be the cost over a period where the program is fully up and running. It shouldn't include years when the program is just collecting taxes but not expending money at the full up and running levels.
And we've already addresses this.Second, they recognized that if the government passes a law mandating insurance even if employers and individuals don't want it ... at the risk of fine and prison if they don't supply/purchase insurance ... then the government has in effect added an indirect tax to those businesses/individuals and ultimately the populace at large. And that's true whether or not a government representative actually lays his/her dirty hands on the money in the transaction.
No, I think "distortion" was a good word for what Cato did.Clearly, CATO's analysis was not at all what you described.
And this is absurd. You can't just ignore the first 4 years of the program to calculate the net cost.
Not only is treating premiums as a tax wrong
I am claiming that the cost of medicare has increased because of the increase in life expectancy.
You are BeAChooser. You post the posts that BeAChooser posts, because you are, in fact, BeAChooser. Or "BAC", as you are colloquially known.Has the likely/expected increase in life expectancy been accounted for in the democrat's and governments evaluation of Obamacare?
Or is Obamacare premised on halting the increase in life expectancy so that it can be ignored ... much like it was in their Medicare program predictions?
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The CBO's estimates for the second ten year period (yes, they provided those) were for an even greater deficit reduction. Obviously, economic forecasting is a lot like weather forecasting, and the further out you go the less accurate you tend to be, but you seem to think the CBO was trying to use a gimmick to give a misleading estimate, and they certainly were not.What's absurd is acting like the 10 years after the first 10 will have the same accounting conditions. Do you think the next 10 year period will also start with four years of taxes but no benefits so that it appears deficit neutral? Of course not. So the CBO and democrat's accounting trick is giving a false impression as to the true cost of the program. Or do you expect this program to end after the first 10 year period, Joe?![]()
Except that it's not. You say it's immaterial that the money doesn't go to the government, but that really is largely what defines a tax.When the ONLY reason those premiums will be paid is because the government FORCES people to pay them ... else be fined and imprisoned ... they become a tax. The fact that the money will go directly to the insurance company from the insured, rather than through government hands (at least until the public option is all that's left ... and believe me that is the Obama administration and democrat's ultimate objective) is immaterial. Those premiums are still being MANDATED under threat of fine and incarceration by the government. That makes them a "tax".
So the CBO and democrat's accounting trick is giving
To me that's the bottom line figure, but the cover letter continues:According to CBO and JCT’s assessment, enacting the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act would result in a net reduction in federal budget deficits of $130 billion over the 2010–2019 period (see Table 1). In the subsequent decade, the collective effect of its provisions would probably be small reductions in federal budget deficits if all of the provisions continued to be fully implemented. Those estimates are subject to substantial uncertainty.
The estimate includes a projected net cost of $599 billion over 10 years for the proposed expansions in insurance coverage. That net cost itself reflects a gross total of $848 billion in subsidies provided through the exchanges, increased net outlays for Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP), and tax credits for small employers; those costs are partly offset by $149 billion in revenues from the excise tax on high-premium insurance plans and $100 billion in net savings from other sources. Over the 2010–2019 period, the net cost of the coverage expansions would be more than offset by the combination of other spending changes that CBO estimates would save $491 billion and other provisions that JCT and CBO estimate would increase federal revenues by $238 billion.1
Has the likely/expected increase in life expectancy been accounted for in the democrat's and governments evaluation of Obamacare?
Or is Obamacare premised on halting the increase in life expectancy so that it can be ignored ... much like it was in their Medicare program predictions?
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Well, you could if Bush's 2000 campaign hadn't explicitly included "no nation building" and "reducing foreign deployment".