Will the Affordable Care Act Become Government’s Piggy Bank?

As first reported by Politico, Republican and Democratic Senate leaders are close to reaching a deal that would stave off impending cuts in Medicare reimbursements. To pay for the so-called “doc fix” – a perpetually vexing circumstance in which Medicare reimbursements would fall more than 20% without repeated congressional action – lawmakers may use $19.2 billion now set aside for subsidies to help low and middle-income Americans buy private insurance under health reform. (More background on the doc fix here and here.)

The subsidies, which will be doled out beginning in 2014, will be based on income and available to Americans earning at or less than 400% of the federal poverty level, about $88,000 per year for a family of four. To apply for subsidies, people will estimate their annual income at the start of the tax year. Under the existing Affordable Care Act, if their income increases substantially during the year, they will be required to pay back some of their subsidies. The ACA caps this payback at $250 for individuals and $450 for families.

Apparently, in a lot of cases, these payback amounts would be substantially less than what the government is technically “owed.” By simply removing the flat dollar caps and installing an as yet undetermined “sliding scale” of payback amounts, lawmakers can generate some $20 billion over ten years, according to a congressional aide familiar with the discussions. This is enough to pay for the doc fix for one year.

The deal is not yet done and some liberal Democrats will probably protest the change, but with support from Finance Committee Chairman Sen. Max Baucus and Ranking Member Sen. Chuck Grassley, it seems plausible this change could happen. If it does, it exposes something Democrats may not be eager to advertise – there is wiggle room built into the Affordable Care Act. Just in this instance, lawmakers found some $20 billion in ACA spending they could live without. What else could they live without?

Democratic lawmakers like Baucus may be playing a dangerous political game. True, it’s not as if Democrats are agreeing to raid the ACA to pay for unrelated legislation – this is using health care funding to pay for health care, after all. But still – doesn’t this set a precedent that could lead to further ACA cuts? “We don’t really see this as a precedent as much as just providing health care that people need,” says the congressional aide. OK, but do Republicans see it this way or do they see an opening to gut health reform?

Related Topics: affordable care act, chuck grassley, doc fix, health reform, Max Baucus, Health Care
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  • http://gum0nshoe.wordpress.com gumOnShoe

    For the Republican Min, Max game, this is just another step in their game of Min. They minimize the affects of anything they appose and maximize the destruction of anything they disagree with.

    This is clearly raiding the ACA, and the Republicans will see it as such and continue the policy. By bankrupting the program now, they can make the case for inefficiency later, just as they have done with SS.

  • http://erieangel.wordpress.com erieangel

    When social security was founded, it was supposed to be a stand-alone entity. The monies collected in social security taxes were to be used to pay out benefits–PERIOD. But then presidents and lawmakers discovered there was in fact a way in which they could “borrow” from SS. That anybody is even entertaining the idea they won’t do the same to the ACA, even before it is fully implemented, is beyond insane.

  • http://gum0nshoe.wordpress.com gumOnShoe

    That doesn’t make it any less morally bankrupt.

  • earljr1

    Give ALL the credit to democratic lawmakers. They, alone, created this legislation and the errors and omissions are too many to be counted. Each layer of this onion creates a new stench and the crowning touch….implementation could well break the existing health care system irreparably. Yes, indeed, keep it around for two more years and watch this Albatross help defeat Obama.

  • http://erieangel.wordpress.com erieangel

    I never said it wasn’t morally bankrupt. I swear, Congress is like a bunch of little kids. They see a few million here, a couple billion there, sitting unused at the moment, but supposedly put aside for future use and they just have to spend it. Forget about the future, somehow the money will be there, or we can just eliminate the program for which the money was orignally intended. In the case of social security it is a matter of us being to told that specific tax dollars are to be used ONLY for social security benefit payments but then the government has borrowed just about every penny of it.
    .
    No wonder we live in such a consumer-driven society today; our own government feels to spend every penny without thinking about that spending will mean down the road.

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