10 Reasons Most People Like Obamacare Once They
Know What's Really In It
By Joshua Holland, AlterNet Posted on July
4, 2012, Printed on July 5,
2012 http://www.alternet.org/story/156149/10_reasons_most_people_like_obamacare_once_they_know_what%27s_really_in_it
There are two Affordable Care Acts. There's the legislation passed by
Congress in 2009, and then there's the mythical Affordable Care Act – the
perfidious “government takeover” decried and demagogued by so many conservatives
(and quite a few liberals). The former is quite popular, the latter gets
decidedly mixed reviews.
Don't take my word for it. A recent poll by the Kaiser Family Foundation
found Americans split down the middle, with 41 percent approving of the law, and
40 percent saying they didn't like it (PDF). But then
Kaiser asked about 12 specific provisions in the legislation, and found that, on
average, 63 percent of respondents approved of the nuts and bolts of Obamacare.
Of the 12 measures they tested, only one – the controversial mandate to carry
health insurance or pay a penalty – received the approval of less than half of
Americans (35 percent).
Or consider this divide: while only 12 percent of Republicans had a positive
view of the law overall, 47 percent, on average, viewed its specifics
favorably.
And here's the kicker: Kaiser found that the most popular parts of the law
were also the ones most Americans weren't aware of, and vice-versa. Almost
everyone knows about the mandate, which most people don't like, but fewer than
half of those polled knew about the law's tax credits for small businesses that
offer their employees coverage, a provision that eight out of 10 people liked
when they heard about it.
None of this should come as a surprise, given the level of mendacity of the
law's opponents. If the Affordable Care Act did in fact feature “death
panels,” resulted in deep
cuts to Medicare, represented a "massive”
tax increase and “Sovietized”
our healthcare system, nobody would support it. Fortunately, none of that bears
any resemblance to reality.
Obviously, the law should be judged on what it actually contains, but
according to Kaiser, six in 10 say they don't have enough information about the
details to understand how it will impact them personally. So here, in no
particular order, are 10 things you may not know about the Affordable Care
Act.
1. People Will Be Getting Checks
Call it a crazy hunch, but my guess is that the law will look a lot less
tyrannical when people start getting checks in the mail to help pay for their
insurance.
Folks making up to four times the federal poverty line will be eligible for
subsidies. In 2012, that would mean a family of four making up to $92,200 (it's
a bit higher in Alaska) would see some cash.
Those subsidies will come in the form of “advanceable” tax credits, meaning
that people won't have to wait until they pay their taxes to get the cash, and
they'll be fully refundable, so those who don't pay enough in federal income
taxes will get a check in the mail from the IRS.
2. The Richest Americans Are Going to Pay More Taxes
Wealthy investors are outraged, but most people probably don't know that a 3.8%
surcharge on investment income – dividends and capital gains -- kicks in
this January for everyone with an adjusted gross income of over $200,000
($250,000 for joint filers). So those currently enjoying the lowest rate on
investments in our nation's history will pay for a decent chunk of the bill.
3. Insurers' Overhead – and Profit Margins -- Are Limited
For the past 18 months or so, insurers have been required to spend 85 percent
of the premiums they collect on healthcare (80 percent for individual and
small-group plans). If they spend less than that, they have to send their
customers a rebate to cover the difference.
Forbes' Rick Ungar called
it, “the true ‘bomb’ contained in Obamacare and the one item that will have more
impact on the future of how medical care is paid for in this country than
anything we’ve seen in quite some time.”
4. Much Ado About the Mandate
With the Supreme Court's ruling last week, the mandate is gone, but the
penalty for not carrying insurance remains. If there's one thing Democrats,
Republicans and independents agree on, it's that they don't like it.
And they shouldn't. But most people probably don't know just how modest the
impact of the mandate really is. According to the Congressional Budget Office,
just 1 percent of the population will pay the penalty, which maxes out at 1
percent of one's income.
A lot of conservatives are convinced that jack-booted gummint thugs will
round them up and stick them in FEMA camps if they don't pay up. But as Timothy
Noah points
out, “the health reform law explicitly states (on Page 336): 'In the case of
any failure by a taxpayer to timely pay any penalty imposed by this section,
such taxpayer shall not be subject to any criminal prosecution or penalty with
respect to such failure.'" They can only dock future tax refunds.
5. And Nobody Ever Talks About the Employer Mandate
Starting in 2014, companies with 50 or more full-time workers (two
part-timers count as one full-timer for this purpose) will have to pay penalties
if they don't cover their employees' health insurance. (This provision is a bit
complicated -- all the details are here.)
6. Shaves the Deficit
Mitt Romnney says that “Obamacare adds trillions to our deficits and to our
national debt, and pushes those obligations onto coming generations.”
That message appears to be sinking in. According to Kaiser, a majority of
Americans – and a third of Democrats – think the healthcare law will increase
the deficit. But according to the Congressional Budget Office, the law will reduce
the projected deficit by $210 billion over the next decade.
7. Chicks Will Dig This
Many people are aware of the regulation requiring insurers to cover people
with pre-existing conditions. It's one of the most popular parts of the
whole. But fewer know that, beginning in 2014, insurers won't be able to charge
women higher premiums than men.
Also coming in 2014: a ban on insurers placing annual limits on healthcare
(lifetime coverage limits were already banned in 2010).
The Kaiser poll found that few people were aware of another popular new
insurance regulation: since 2010, insurance companies can no longer charge
co-pays or hold you to a deductible for preventive health services.
8. New Dollars for Community Health Centers
Kaiser didn't ask for people's opinions on this one, but it may be one of
those under-the-radar provisions that actually ends up helping a lot of
people.
Community health centers (CHCs) now serve the primary care needs of about 20
million Americans, and they have a proven track record. But the system is
strained and underfunded.
The expansion of Medicaid will help alleviate some of the pressure, and the
healthcare law also allocates $11 billion over a five-year period to build new
CHCs and upgrade existing infrastructure. Most of the dollars will end up in
poorer communities.
A lot of underserved people live in rural America, and the law also provides
money to train and place 16,000 primary caregivers in rural communities over a
five-year period.
9. Essential Benefits
Starting in 2014, in order for insurers to sell coverage through state-based
exchanges – a place where a lot of the newly insured will likely end up – they
will be required to cover a package of “essential benefits,” including maternity
care, mental healthcare and substance abuse treatment, pediatric care, ambulance
rides and hospitalization.
They don't have to if they don't want to participate in the exchanges, yet
this measure is, according to many, at the heart of the supposed “government
takeover” of our healthcare system.
10. It's Not So Easy to Repeal
There is no doubt that we'll hear lots of Republicans blustering about how
they'll repeal Obamacare on day one if they win the White House and the Senate,
but it's a lot less clear that they'd actually follow through.
As Igor Volsky notes,
unless the Republicans were to win both the White House and a huge number of
senate seats, they “can do little more than weaken Obamacare’s regulations and
defund some of its provisions.” They also have nothing to replace it with, and
would own our screwed up healthcare system for a generation. And they'd lose an
issue that fires up the conservative base. They will, however, do their best to
gum up the works as the law is implemented.
The takeaway to all of this is that the healthcare law is only going to get
more popular as it's provisions kick in. People will see some tangible benefits,
and the fearmongering will prove unfounded.
Like the idea of government itself, people are suspicious of the Affordable
Care Act as an abstraction, but when it gets to the specifics they tend to like
it a lot better.
Joshua Holland is an editor and senior writer at AlterNet. He is the
author of The 15 Biggest
Lies About the Economy: And Everything else the Right Doesn't Want You to Know
About Taxes, Jobs and Corporate America. Drop him an email or follow him on Twitter.
© 2012 Independent Media Institute. All rights
reserved. View this story online at:
http://www.alternet.org/story/156149/
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