Welcome to DU!
The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards.
Join the community:
Create a free account
Support DU (and get rid of ads!):
Become a Star Member
Latest Breaking News
Editorials & Other Articles
General Discussion
The DU Lounge
All Forums
Issue Forums
Culture Forums
Alliance Forums
Region Forums
Support Forums
Help & Search
Economy
In reply to the discussion: STOCK MARKET WATCH -- Friday, 1 November 2013 [View all]Demeter
(85,373 posts)7. The President Wants You to Get Rich on Obamacare By ADAM DAVIDSON
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/11/03/magazine/the-president-wants-you-to-get-rich-on-obamacare.html?pagewanted=print
... During the past year, anxiety about the onset of Obamacare has created a chill in some parts of the economy. While large health care businesses insurance companies, for instance, and hospital chains have poured significant resources into preparing for millions of new customers, countless investors have appeared spooked by the perpetual threats to repeal, or at least revise, the law. According to Thomson Reuters, private equity investment, usually the lifeblood for entrepreneurialism, has dropped by an astonishing 65 percent in the health care sector this year.
Scully has been trying to assuage these worries, but the nervous questions keep coming at him. Before he even began his speech, one attendee said he feared that only three million new patients, far fewer than estimated, would be signing up for insurance. No way, Scully said. Way more way more. At least 15 million, maybe 20 million. The Democrats have a huge incentive to make this work. Another asked if Scully was worried about Congressional repeal. Its just not going to happen, he said. Dont pay attention to Rush Limbaugh. When Scully finally began his speech, he noted that the prevailing narrative among Republicans assuming that many in the room were, like him, Republican was incorrect. Its not a government takeover of medicine, he told the crowd. Its the privatization of health care. In fact, Obamacare, he said, was largely based on past Republican initiatives. If you took George H. W. Bushs health plan and removed the label, youd think it was Obamacare.
Scully then segued to his main point, one he has been making in similarly handsome dining rooms across the country: No matter what investors thought about Obamacare politically and surely many there did not think much of it the law was going to make some people very rich. The Affordable Care Act, he said, wasnt simply a law that mandated insurance for the uninsured. Instead, it would fundamentally transform the basic business model of medicine. With the right understanding of the industry, private-sector markets and bureaucratic rules, savvy investors could help underwrite innovative companies specifically designed to profit from the law. Billions could flow from Washington to Wall Street, indeed.
Scully, who has spent the last 30-some years oscillating between government and the private sector, is hoping to be his own best proof of the Obamacare gold mine. As a principal health policy adviser under President George H. W. Bush, he helped formulate many of those past Republican initiatives like the shift to private-insurance programs that Obamacare has put into law. Under George W. Bush, he ran the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and oversaw a host of proto-Obamacare reforms, like Medicare Part D, which introduced competition into the government-supported health care market. After leaving C.M.S. in 2004, Scully began working simultaneously at Welsh, Carson, Anderson & Stowe, a leading health care private equity firm, and Alston & Bird, a law firm and health care lobbying organization. When the Affordable Care Act became law in 2010, he found himself in the rare position of being a lobbyist, private equity executive and former government health care official with access to a serious amount of capital. During the past three years, as other Republicans have tried to overturn Obamacare, Scully searched for a way to make a killing from it....
TANSY, YOU HAVE THAT STAMP HANDY?
... During the past year, anxiety about the onset of Obamacare has created a chill in some parts of the economy. While large health care businesses insurance companies, for instance, and hospital chains have poured significant resources into preparing for millions of new customers, countless investors have appeared spooked by the perpetual threats to repeal, or at least revise, the law. According to Thomson Reuters, private equity investment, usually the lifeblood for entrepreneurialism, has dropped by an astonishing 65 percent in the health care sector this year.
Scully has been trying to assuage these worries, but the nervous questions keep coming at him. Before he even began his speech, one attendee said he feared that only three million new patients, far fewer than estimated, would be signing up for insurance. No way, Scully said. Way more way more. At least 15 million, maybe 20 million. The Democrats have a huge incentive to make this work. Another asked if Scully was worried about Congressional repeal. Its just not going to happen, he said. Dont pay attention to Rush Limbaugh. When Scully finally began his speech, he noted that the prevailing narrative among Republicans assuming that many in the room were, like him, Republican was incorrect. Its not a government takeover of medicine, he told the crowd. Its the privatization of health care. In fact, Obamacare, he said, was largely based on past Republican initiatives. If you took George H. W. Bushs health plan and removed the label, youd think it was Obamacare.
Scully then segued to his main point, one he has been making in similarly handsome dining rooms across the country: No matter what investors thought about Obamacare politically and surely many there did not think much of it the law was going to make some people very rich. The Affordable Care Act, he said, wasnt simply a law that mandated insurance for the uninsured. Instead, it would fundamentally transform the basic business model of medicine. With the right understanding of the industry, private-sector markets and bureaucratic rules, savvy investors could help underwrite innovative companies specifically designed to profit from the law. Billions could flow from Washington to Wall Street, indeed.
Scully, who has spent the last 30-some years oscillating between government and the private sector, is hoping to be his own best proof of the Obamacare gold mine. As a principal health policy adviser under President George H. W. Bush, he helped formulate many of those past Republican initiatives like the shift to private-insurance programs that Obamacare has put into law. Under George W. Bush, he ran the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and oversaw a host of proto-Obamacare reforms, like Medicare Part D, which introduced competition into the government-supported health care market. After leaving C.M.S. in 2004, Scully began working simultaneously at Welsh, Carson, Anderson & Stowe, a leading health care private equity firm, and Alston & Bird, a law firm and health care lobbying organization. When the Affordable Care Act became law in 2010, he found himself in the rare position of being a lobbyist, private equity executive and former government health care official with access to a serious amount of capital. During the past three years, as other Republicans have tried to overturn Obamacare, Scully searched for a way to make a killing from it....
TANSY, YOU HAVE THAT STAMP HANDY?
Edit history
Please sign in to view edit histories.
Recommendations
0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):
62 replies
= new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight:
NoneDon't highlight anything
5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
RecommendedHighlight replies with 5 or more recommendations
DHS, NSA Threaten to Sue Man for Selling "Department of Homeland Stupidity" T-Shirts. Coffee Mugs
Demeter
Oct 2013
#9
Having Beaten Off the Gringos, Brazil isn't likely to fall to Chinese Blandishments or Bribes
Demeter
Nov 2013
#14
On the other hand, it's hard to support democracy when you're constantly on the move
Demeter
Nov 2013
#15
indeed. it's jobs first -- and as another duer pointed out -- many households have 2 people
xchrom
Nov 2013
#17
Or is it because the way we typically choose to increase home ownership is through
jtuck004
Nov 2013
#57
Obamacare: The Biggest Insurance Scam in History By Kevin Zeese and Margaret Flowers
Demeter
Nov 2013
#22