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Tag: healthcare reform

ACA Allies To Focus On Uninsured In 18 States

Supporters of the Affordable Care Act said they’ll debut a campaign this month in 18 U.S. states to promote a law still poorly understood by those designed to benefit most.

Enroll America, a Washington-based nonprofit group, said it will hold 50 community events to kick off the effort in states with high numbers of uninsured residents, from California to Texas to Florida. An advertising campaign will follow as the law approaches the Oct. 1 opening of enrollment for subsidized insurance plans.

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CBO Says Less Than 2% Of Americans Will Owe The Health Care Penalty

FACT SHEET: INDIVIDUAL SHARED RESPONSIBILITY FOR HEALTH INSURANCE COVERAGE AND MINIMUM ESSENTIAL COVERAGE PROPOSED RULES

Under the Affordable Care Act, the Federal government, State governments, insurers, employers, and individuals are given shared responsibility to reform and improve the availability, quality, and affordability of health insurance coverage in the United States. Starting in 2014, the individual shared responsibility provision calls for each individual to have basic health insurance coverage (known as minimum essential coverage), qualify for an exemption, or make a shared responsibility payment when filing a federal income tax return. Individuals will not have to make a payment if coverage is unaffordable, if they spend less than three consecutive months without coverage, or if they qualify for an exemption for several other reasons, including hardship and religious beliefs.

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The IRS and Obamacare By The Numbers

New details recently emerged about the IRS, as representatives from six conservative groups testified before Congress about the scrutiny and demands they faced from Obama administration bureaucrats.

Their testimony reminds us once again why Americans should be concerned about the new powers granted to the IRS as a result of Obamacare.

Just consider the numbers:

  1. 18-New taxes in Obamacare, including 12 that directly violate then-Senator Barack Obama’s “firm pledge” to those making under $250,000 per year that he would not “raise any of your taxes.”
  2. 47-New provisions Obamacare charges the IRS with implementing, according to the Government Accountability Office.
  3. $695-Tax for not buying “government-approved” health insurance the IRS will be charged with enforcing on all Americans.
  4. 1,954-Full-time bureaucrats the IRS wants to devote to Obamacare implementation and enforcement in the upcoming fiscal year.
  5. 60,000,000-Medical records the IRS has been charged with improperly seizing, raising concerns about whether the agency can handle the personal health insurance information all Americans will be required to submit to the IRS.
  6. $439,584,000-The IRS’s request for new spending on Obamacare implementation in the upcoming fiscal year; the request did not specify how much of those funds the IRS will spend on the “Cupid shuffle.”
  7. 6,100,000,000-Man-hours Americans already devote to tax compliance, according to the National Taxpayer Advocate, a burden that will rise significantly thanks to Obamacare.
  8. $1,000,000,000,000-New revenue raised by Obamacare in its first 10 years alone, according to the Congressional Budget Office, sums that will only rise in future decades.

Truncated, Source:  The Christian Post

California Exchange Shows Lower Premiums…or Does It?

The health insurance exchange Covered California has been making headlines recently. Thirteen insurance carriers have submitted plans to be offered on the state-based health insurance exchange come 2014 and the premium rates released for these plans are lower than federal actuaries and budget forecasters had expected. Covered California has predicted that rates for individuals in 2014 will range from two percent above to 29% below average small-employer premiums this year.

These rates are surprising given the recent flood of studies performed by independent entities such as the Academy of Actuaries, the Congressional Budget Office and the Milliman Index, which all predict that, once the health reform law is implemented, insurance premiums in the exchanges, especially those for the young and healthy, are likely to spike in most states.

But are they?  The California data release compares individual plan coverage rates to small-employer plan rates—an apples-to-oranges comparison. The pure, unsubsidized premium costs of individual coverage versus employer coverage normally shows that individual market rates are lower, given that group purchasers often opt for richer plan designs. A more appropriate comparison might have been the cost of projected individual rates in California for this year versus next year. Forbes’ Avik Roy did such an analysis and found that the difference in mandated benefits and rating changes will result in individual-market price increases of between 64% and 146% when you compare 2013 individual premium rates with proposed 2014 exchange rates. It’s true that the availability of subsidies will reduce the amount many exchange consumers will pay out of pocket for their coverage, but that doesn’t mean the actual premiums will be reduced–far from it.

Clearly, the Obama Administration will take what it can get when it comes to positive press surrounding the health reform law. To further draw attention to the news of California’s lowered premiums, President Obama travelled to San Jose today to give a speech touting the law’s benefits. But even during that address, Obama acknowledged that some Americans are likely to see their premiums rise, although he encouraged them to blame their employers rather than PPACA.

“Employers may be shifting costs through higher premiums or higher deductibles or higher copays,” he said. “There may still be folks out there who are feeling higher costs.”

Source: NAHU, Washington Update

ACA Is Affecting Small Business and Business Plans

ACA (a.k.a. ObamaCare) is affecting small business and their ability to plan their business.

According to a recent Gallup poll, 41% of businesses self-report that they have held off hiring because of ObamaCare.

Another 38% self-report that they have pulled back on plans to grow their businesses because of ObamaCare.

Half of U.S. Small Businesses think the health care law is bad for their businesses.

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