America?s Affordable Health Choices Act | EdLabor Journal | Committee on Education and Labor
Pretty different from previous Senate drafts. This one includes a nationally run public/private insurance plan "Exchange" instead of state run portals, A federally funded and managed public insurance provider instead of an independent, non-profit managed "public" insurer, expansions to Medicaid and Medicare, personal mandates making it illegal to not have health insurance, and an employer coverage mandate or tax. As far as I can tell the plans offered will be the classic all-you-can-eat! type plans.
As far as government subsidies of premiums go, the money is really going to flow! Subsidies will help offset health premiums based on income. On the low end scale, Medicaid kicks in below 133% of the poverty line. Above that, up to 400% of the poverty line ($43,320 for an individual and $88,200 for families of four) the government will pay a percentage of your premiums calculated through caps - 1.5% of your income on the low end to 11% at the high end.
To put that into perspective, a family of four that generated about 90K a year will have their premiums subsidized so as to limit cost to around 9K a year. For individuals making 43K a year, premiums will be limited to 4.7K a year. At the low end, a family of four making about 30K a year will have their premiums limited to about 450 dollars.
To pay for the 1 to 2 trillion over the next decade it'll cost, they will rely on "reforms" (good luck with that!) and about 150 billion in additional taxes on the rich. (The rest will be covered by the U.S. taxpayer and China. :roll
The CBO estimates the plan will force insurance upon or provide insurance to 37 million people who don't currently have coverage or can't find or afford it. They also say it'll leave 17 million illegals out, which is a little strange, I've never seen illegal numbers cited that high.
Pretty different from previous Senate drafts. This one includes a nationally run public/private insurance plan "Exchange" instead of state run portals, A federally funded and managed public insurance provider instead of an independent, non-profit managed "public" insurer, expansions to Medicaid and Medicare, personal mandates making it illegal to not have health insurance, and an employer coverage mandate or tax. As far as I can tell the plans offered will be the classic all-you-can-eat! type plans.
As far as government subsidies of premiums go, the money is really going to flow! Subsidies will help offset health premiums based on income. On the low end scale, Medicaid kicks in below 133% of the poverty line. Above that, up to 400% of the poverty line ($43,320 for an individual and $88,200 for families of four) the government will pay a percentage of your premiums calculated through caps - 1.5% of your income on the low end to 11% at the high end.
To put that into perspective, a family of four that generated about 90K a year will have their premiums subsidized so as to limit cost to around 9K a year. For individuals making 43K a year, premiums will be limited to 4.7K a year. At the low end, a family of four making about 30K a year will have their premiums limited to about 450 dollars.
To pay for the 1 to 2 trillion over the next decade it'll cost, they will rely on "reforms" (good luck with that!) and about 150 billion in additional taxes on the rich. (The rest will be covered by the U.S. taxpayer and China. :roll
The CBO estimates the plan will force insurance upon or provide insurance to 37 million people who don't currently have coverage or can't find or afford it. They also say it'll leave 17 million illegals out, which is a little strange, I've never seen illegal numbers cited that high.