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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsPaul Krugman:Obamacare Not A Total Disaster, Continued
Perceptions about health reform are in an interesting place. Just about everyone on the right is still living in October, the annus horribilis of Obamacare (yes, I know it was just a month, and I dont care), and is waiting to move in for the kill after the whole thing collapses. Meanwhile, a funny thing has been happening: enrollments surged this month, to such an extent that the original expectation of 7 million people signed up via the exchanges by the end of March no longer looks crazy.
OK, the usual caveats: we dont know how many of the people signing up via the exchanges are replacing existing policies, and we dont know how much trouble there will be when people start trying to use their new insurance. On the other hand, we know that there are a substantial number of people buying ACA-compliant policies directly from insurers, who dont show up in the numbers yet.
And while 7 million has become the number to match or beat, the truth is that it doesnt matter too much if only 6 million sign up via the exchanges, plus millions more who are signed up under expanded Medicaid. Even a slightly disappointing first year will still offer enough people benefits to make reform politically irreversible.
At this point, we have more than 2 million signed up via the exchanges and more than 4 million added to Medicaid. Both numbers will grow a lot over the next three months. This is pretty close to the end game.
http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/12/30/obamacare-not-a-total-disaster-continued/?smid=tw-NytimesKrugman&seid=auto&_r=0
Wounded Bear
(58,694 posts)Doctor_J
(36,392 posts)Now even the fans are admitting that the idea that this will become SP is out of the question.
Getting more people insurance - good. Leaving millions without, remaining the worst and most expensive in the civilized world - bad and now carved in stone.