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In reply to the discussion: STOCK MARKET WATCH -- Wednesday, 17 September 2014 [View all]xchrom
(108,903 posts)17. Health Care Is Still for the Rich or Lucky
http://www.bloombergview.com/articles/2014-09-16/health-care-is-still-for-the-rich-or-lucky
Today's Census Bureau report on health insurance in 2013 shows that on the eve of Obamacare, whether you had coverage was largely a question of how much money you made:

Obamacare can't fix all of that. Just two-thirds of adults who were eligible for Medicaid in 2009-2010 signed up, according to a 2012 study from the Urban Institute, and even with the law's individual mandate there will still be some people who dont enroll. The same goes for the state insurance exchanges, whose subsidies will draw in some -- but not all -- of the uninsured in higher income brackets.
But the chart above is still one of the best possible arguments for the necessity of Obamacare, by demonstrating that the government programs preceding the law are too narrow to cover the poor. It shows that even with the existence of Medicaid, the Children's Health Insurance Program and other assistance, health coverage in the U.S. remains a luxury good -- one that the rich can afford but others struggle, in proportion to their income, to obtain.
So heres the question that ought to define the Obamacare debate: Is that situation acceptable? Conservatives' fixation on the law's real or perceived flaws -- its constitutionality, its clarity of intent, its effect on the deficit, its technological screw-ups, its privacy threats -- avoid dealing with that question. Today's numbers underline why the law's opponents should be pressed to address it -- and make clear what they would offer in its place.
Today's Census Bureau report on health insurance in 2013 shows that on the eve of Obamacare, whether you had coverage was largely a question of how much money you made:

Obamacare can't fix all of that. Just two-thirds of adults who were eligible for Medicaid in 2009-2010 signed up, according to a 2012 study from the Urban Institute, and even with the law's individual mandate there will still be some people who dont enroll. The same goes for the state insurance exchanges, whose subsidies will draw in some -- but not all -- of the uninsured in higher income brackets.
But the chart above is still one of the best possible arguments for the necessity of Obamacare, by demonstrating that the government programs preceding the law are too narrow to cover the poor. It shows that even with the existence of Medicaid, the Children's Health Insurance Program and other assistance, health coverage in the U.S. remains a luxury good -- one that the rich can afford but others struggle, in proportion to their income, to obtain.
So heres the question that ought to define the Obamacare debate: Is that situation acceptable? Conservatives' fixation on the law's real or perceived flaws -- its constitutionality, its clarity of intent, its effect on the deficit, its technological screw-ups, its privacy threats -- avoid dealing with that question. Today's numbers underline why the law's opponents should be pressed to address it -- and make clear what they would offer in its place.
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