Since
Obamacare’s Passage, Millions Have Lost Employer-Sponsored Health Insurance
4:42
PM, Nov 11, 2011 • By JEFFREY H.
ANDERSON
Throughout the Obamacare debate, President Obama repeatedly promised,
“If you like your health care plan, you can keep your health care plan.” Now, Gallup reports that from the first quarter
of 2010 (when Obama signed Obamacare into law) to the third quarter of this
year, 2 percent of American adults lost their employer sponsored health
insurance. In other words, about 4.5 million Americans lost their
employer-sponsored insurance over a span of just 18 months.
This is not what the
Congressional Budget Office (CBO) had predicted would happen. Rather, the CBO
had predicted that Obamacare would increase the number of people with
employer-sponsored insurance by now. It had predicted that, under Obamacare, 6
million more Americans would have employer-sponsored insurance in 2011 than in
2010 (see table 4, which shows the CBO’s
projected increase of 3 million under (pre-Obamacare) current law and an
additional 3 million under Obamacare). So the CBO’s rosy projections for
Obamacare (and even these paint a frightening picture)
are already proving false.
Whether the decline
in employer-sponsored insurance over the past 18 months is a product of Obamacare
or of the Obama economy — and whether Obamacare is the principal cause of the anemic performance of the Obama economy —
can be debated. But what’s clear is that, more than 25 months before Obamacare
would really go into effect — if it’s not repealed first — employers are
already dropping employees from their insurance rolls.
Take Walmart, for
example — a prominent Obamacare supporter. Gallup
writes,
“The nation's largest
private employer, Wal-Mart, announced in October that new part-time employees
who work less than an average of 24 hours a week would no longer be able to get
their health insurance from the company. Wal-Mart laid out several other cuts
to its health insurance offerings, including some workers’ ability get coverage
for their spouses. Other companies have already made and will likely continue
to make similar changes to their health insurance benefits….
“If Wal-Mart's
decision is a precursor of how employers intend to manage their healthcare
costs, the downward trend in employer-based healthcare will likely continue.”
So
in addition to costing about $2.5 trillion over its real
first decade (2014 to 2023), looting nearly $1 trillion from Medicare over that
time (according to the CBO), forcing Americans to buy government-approved
health insurance under penalty of law, and amassing unprecedented power and
money in Washington at the expense of Americans’ liberty — if Obamacare stays
on the books, you may like your health care plan, but that doesn’t necessarily
mean you can keep your health care plan.
It’s time to repeal
Obamacare.
H/T The Weekly Stantard
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