The media have been buzzing with stories — many of them wildly exaggerated
— of people facing higher premiums as a result of Obamacare. But
there’s a story about rates you may not have heard: According to Jonathan Gruber, a leading health care wonk at MIT, all private insurance premiums in the 25 red states that are refusing to expand their Medicaid programs will be 15 percent higher as a direct result of that decision.
But those numbers don’t capture the human cost. The reality is that conservatives are complaining about insurance policies being cancelled and the
ACA’s error-plagued exchanges at the same time as they actively work to
keep millions of poor Americans from gaining coverage under the law’s
Medicaid expansion.
The victims of Obamacare’s implementation problems being hit the
hardest, by far, are those whose incomes fall between the federal
poverty line and the eligibility cutoffs in those 25 states rejecting
Medicaid expansion. Not only will they be left uncovered, they won’t
even be eligible for the generous subsidies that people earning slightly more than they do can use to buy insurance. It’s brutally unfair. The Kaiser Family Foundation estimates that 4.8 million poor adults may fall into that coverage gap — about twice the number of people expected to pay more for their insurance when their substandard policies are cancelled.
http://billmoyers.com/2013/11/21/the-biggest-problem-with-obamacares-rollout-is-being-caused-intentionally-by-republicans/
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