In spite of my broader liberal leanings, I was a critic of the ACA when it was coming out. One reason was the moral hazard of the individual mandate (I did not like this), but the other primary reason was that it didn't do enough to keep overall spending (total national spending, not subsidized cost to individual) under control.The data for the majority of the probable political lifespan of the ACA is now available. The numbers make me wonder - did this legislation do anything for affordability of health care? It did get more people covered and vastly simplified the process of getting covered. Those were great accomplishments (which are about to be completely reversed), they were good for our nation, and I want to recognize that.http://www.ncsl.org/research/health/health-insurance-premiums.aspxI realize that the Republican replacement is going to be vastly worse. In defense of the ACA, in 2015 we spent 17.9% of GDP on health care, and has been a little constant-ish since 2010. This is possible largely because US GDP growth, itself, was relatively strong during this time as well. These healthcare cost increases numbers tend to be nominal figures, so a GDP real growth of 2% would actually counter-balance something more like 4%, and a 5% healthcare growth would only be 1% increase in the GDP burden to the national economy at-large.https://www.cms.gov/research-statistics-data-and-systems/statistics-trends-and-reports/nationalhealthexpenddata/nationalhealthaccountshistorical.htmlBut real life doesn't work on an economy-at-large scale. While GDP has been growth, incomes have still been relatively constant, and those individual income figures have been directly absorbing the healthcare cost increases, outright displacing other spending and savings.Now, in 2017, we are faced with numbers like seen in the following article, which come close to apocalyptic.https://www.vox.com/2017/5/30/15701986/blue-cross-north-carolina-obamacare-premiums
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6/4/2017 6:48:05 PM