New study finds that Obamacare subsidies cost 578% more than CBO estimates

Verum Serum writes about a new Lewin Group study on the cost of Obamacare health care subsidies. (H/T Health Care BS via ECM)

Excerpt:

A new study by the Lewin Group estimates that 28.6 million Americans will be eligible for a federal subsidy to purchase health insurance beginning in 2014 at a projected cost to tax payers in excess of $110 billion. This estimate is dramatically higher (578%) than the cost of these subsidies forecast by the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) prior to the bill’s enactment into law. If the new estimate is correct, it would mean that instead of lowering the deficit by $143 billion over ten years—a claim widely touted by proponents of the law— the legislation would begin adding to the deficit as early as 2015, only one year after major provisions of the law go into effect.

A central component of the Patient Protection and Affordability Act is the establishment of health insurance exchanges starting in 2014, enabling individuals and families with incomes up to 400% of the federal poverty level who do not have insurance to purchase federally subsidized coverage. The CBO’s final analysis of the bill enacted into law projected that only 7 million Americans would begin receiving these subsidies in 2014 at a total budgetary cost of $19 billion. This figure is $91 billion lower than the amount estimated by the Lewin Group.

The Lewin Group study was commissioned by Families USA, a healthcare reform advocacy group based out of Washington D.C. which is closely allied with the White House and leading Democrats in Congress. Then Senator Obama was a keynote speaker at their annual Health Action conference in 2005 and 2007, and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi opened the 2008 event. Other leading Democrats who have participated at Families USA events in recent years include Hillary Clinton, John Kerry, and Ted Kennedy.

[…]The CBO’s projection that the healthcare reform bill would reduce the deficit by an estimated $143 billion over 10 years was a critical factor in the enactment of the bill. Democrats lost their super-majority in the Senate in January 2010 when Scott Brown was elected in Massachusetts, and ultimately passed the bill in March only through the use of procedural tactics, and without a single Republican vote in the House or Senate.

The claim that the bill will reduce the deficit continues to be a leading selling point for proponents of reform. Just last month Families USA repeated this claim in a press release criticizing opponents of the legislation. But if the latest Lewin Group estimate is correct the initial 10-year cost of the bill will be significantly higher than what was forecast by the CBO, and would begin adding to the federal deficit as early as 2015.

So, this is a study commissioned by a left-wing group that did not find what they set out to find. I’m sure you will be hearing more about this study this week, but this finding will probably not be featured.

One thought on “New study finds that Obamacare subsidies cost 578% more than CBO estimates”

  1. What’s important to understand about the report The Lewin Group conducted for Families USA is that the report estimates the number of people eligible for the tax incentive rather than how many actually will take advantage of it. In the report, we estimated that 28.6 million people would be eligible for the premium tax credit. In an earlier study of the Act (http://www.lewin.com/content/publications/LewinGroupAnalysis-PatientProtectionandAffordableCareAct2010.pdf) we had estimated that only about 20.1 million of these people would actually take the credit and purchase coverage, once program enrollment is fully mature. In fact, our experience shows that it could take a number of years before eligible people sign up. The Congressional Budget Office appears to have estimated that about 19 million people would receive the credit once enrollment is fully matured. (Letter to Speaker Nancy Pelosi from Douglas Elmendorf, Director of the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) concerning CBO estimates of the cost and coverage impacts of the Health reform bills, March 20, 2010 online at http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/113xx/doc11355/hr4872.pdf ).

    Thus, the CBO estimate of 19 million people receiving the credit is quite close to our estimate of 20.1 million recipients. Our estimate of the cost of the premium subsidies is within 18 percent of the CBO estimate for the ten year period of 2010 through 2019 (CBO $464 billion; Lewin $549 billion).

    The Lewin Group does not advocate for or against any policy, program or legislation. For more information visit http://www.lewin.com/integrity.

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