Health CareHealth Care Reform

Westerman: Health Care Loss Estimates From O’Care Repeal ‘Overinflated’

The Affordable Care Act (ACA) in its current form is headed for insolvency — and the estimate of 24 million Americans losing their health care is “overinflated” — according to Congressman Bruce Westerman.

Westerman spoke to constituents about the ongoing health care reform debate in Washington D.C. (and other topics) in a telephone town hall Thursday night.

Westerman said the ACA is on a “collision course for being insolvent” if changes aren’t made to the program.

Westerman said:

We’re seeing across the country where…Iowa for example…94 of the 99 counties in Iowa you can’t get an Obamacare plan because the insurance companies have pulled out. We’re seeing insurance companies pulling out of other states to provide Obamacare plans. This program is imploding on itself. What we are doing with the American Health Care Act (AHCA) is trying to put a system in place that will actually help people to get the coverage they need.

The AHCA passed the House narrowly in early May, but has stalled since then in the Senate.

Westerman also addressed possible health insurance losses if the AHCA were to ever become law.

Westerman said:

The CBO in the original score said 24 million people would lose their health care. I believe that number is overinflated. They started off using their baseline scoring which was 7 million people. They said there should be 7 million people on the system that aren’t on the system right now. Part of those 24 million that they’re saying will lose their health care are people that are being forced by the government to purchase health care with the mandates. I don’t think anyone should be forced to purchase health care. We’re trying to put a system in place that will provide people options where they’ll actually want to purchase health care. We’re putting stuff in place like risk pools to help lower the cost of insurance. Right now we’re seeing insurance companies say that the cost of premiums could go up as much as 40 percent in some places. We’ve seen an increasing cost of insurance since the Affordable Care Act has been in place. This program is broken. I believe what we’re putting in place is a much better program. It’s got some things that I would like to change in it. It’s got some things that I hope the Senate will make some changes on, but it’s far better than anything the Affordable Care Act ever offered in its current state.

Although the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) report does estimate that 24 million fewer people would purchase insurance under the AHCA than under the ACA, 14 million of that 24 million total would be composed of people who decided not to purchase insurance due to mandate penalty repeals.

The report states:

CBO and [the Joint Committee on Taxation] estimate that, in 2018, 14 million more people would be uninsured under the legislation than under current law. Most of that increase would stem from repealing the penalties associated with the individual mandate. Some of those people would choose not to have insurance because they chose to be covered by insurance under current law only to avoid paying the penalties, and some people would forgo insurance in response to higher premiums.

Translation: more people will sign up for health insurance when the law forces them to sign up for health insurance. Shocking!
Arkansans will find out just whether the ACA is indeed “imploding on itself” later in the summer. Health insurance companies’ rate increase requests are due July 14.

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3 thoughts on “Westerman: Health Care Loss Estimates From O’Care Repeal ‘Overinflated’

  • The reason the ACA is imploding is the Rebublicans removed the individual mandate and created uncertainty for the cost sharing portion. PEople are not stupid and the false information on this website is a disgrace. THe GOP have initiated one of the worst human rights travesties by taking away healthcare from 20 million Americans.

    Reply
  • Jon Dunlop

    Representative Westerman: The ACA stinks. But the AHCA will stink even more. The problem is that healthcare has become too expensive for more and more lower and middle class Americans to afford it. The Package you voted for in the House will still leave millions without access – whether it’s 24 million, or 14 million, or 4 million, it is beside the point. And yes, the Free Market system is wonderful for many aspects of our day to day economic lives. So is a little Socialism. We already have Socialism in Medicare. It works very well for Seniors, and as demonstrated in other industrialized nations across the planet, it can work for ALL citizens. Why wouldn’t you want that? The Free Market approach in this case serves to protect the profits of the Healthcare insurance industry and Big Pharma, and will always exclude millions from access (because it’s too expensive), while making the cost prohibitively expensive for many of the rest of us. Some things, in order to benefit ALL Americans need to be Socialized.

    Reply
  • Thomas Heckmann

    Dear Mr. Westerman,
    As a one-time professional statistician, I do not see anything in your “downsizing” the healthcare coverage losses to convince me you are working from much more than speculation projected upon political position. But at least you are not alone in that
    Respectfully,
    TH

    Reply

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