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Americans’ health has been deteriorating as the provisions of the Affordable Care Act were supposed to be providing improvements
See
Death Rate Rose and Life Expectancy Recently Fell in America by Hans Bader of CEI.
"The death rate increased 1.2% last year, and life expectancy fell
in 2015, the most recent year for which data is available. Female life
expectancy dropped from 81.3 to 81.2 years, and male life expectancy
fell from 76.5 to 76.3 years. As ABC News notes,
“A decades-long trend of rising life expectancy in the U.S. could be
ending: It declined last year and it is no better than it was four years
ago.”
The core elements of Obamacare went into effect in 2014.
Americans’ health has thus been deteriorating even as the provisions of
the Affordable Care Act were supposed to be providing improvements.
The Economic Policy Journal predicted in 2012 that “life expectancy will decline under Obamacare.” In 2009, the dean of Harvard Medical School, Jeffrey Flier, predicted that Obamacare would cost lives by harming life-saving medical innovation. In 2013, two doctors wrote in The Wall Street Journal that Obamacare is “bad for your health,” and that it would eventually have a devastating effect on medical innovation by driving down investment in medical devices.
Supporters of Obamacare claimed its Medicaid expansion would save
lives, but it does not appear to be helping. Despite its enormous cost
of billions of dollars annually, expanding Medicaid does little to
improve health outcomes for recipients. As Bloomberg News’ Megan McArdle
has noted, expanded Medicaid eligibility in Oregon had “no impact on objective measures of health” for recipients. As a study in the New England Journal of Medicine noted,
“Medicaid coverage generated no significant improvements in measured
physical health outcomes in the first 2 years,” even though “it did
increase use of health care services.”
Obamacare’s expansion of Medicaid reduced employment in the states that participated in it by a statistically significant extent (1.5%-3%), according to a recent study by Georgetown University’s Tomas Wind. The substantial reduction in employment due to Obamacare’s Medicaid expansion was not predicted
by the Congressional Budget Office, although the CBO did predict that
other provisions of Obamacare would shrink employment. In February 2014,
a Congressional Budget Office report estimated that
“the new healthcare law will cost the nation the equivalent of 2.5
million workers in the next decade.” It will also increase the size of
the national debt by hundreds of billions of dollars.
Obamacare tax credits contain even worse work disincentives than
Obamacare’s Medicaid expansion, for many older workers. For example,
they effectively create a 35,618 percent marginal tax rate
for a hypothetical 62-year-old whose income rises by $22, by triggering
the sudden loss of $7,836 in government tax credits. That leaves the
worker more than $7,000 poorer for the sin of earning a few extra
dollars. Real world examples of how Obamacare punishes hard work are found here.
Health insurance premiums will also increase significantly
next year, according to the Obama administration. Such premium
increases contradict President Obama’s claim before Obamacare was passed
that Americans would save $2,500 a year under it."
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