Republican senators have come up with an alternative to Obama care. A bit late but...
- We allow small businesses to band together for coverage – like large corporations do – to negotiate a better deal for health coverage.
- We scrap all of ObamaCare’s rating changes and expensive mandates.
- We offer individuals who are uninsured, self-employed, or working at a small business a tax credit for health coverage to help them be able to buy a plan and keep it.
- We reform – but do not expand – the broken Medicaid entitlement. Too often Medicaid proves the axiom that access to a government health care program is not necessarily access to health care.
Because Medicaid often pays providers so little, roughly half of physicians no longer accept Medicaid patients.
Based on the feedback of many governors, we give states dramatically more flexibility to provide their citizens the health care they need, without all the red tape, micromanagement, and uncertainty from Washington.
Taking their ideas one at a time.
We allow small businesses to band together for coverage – like large corporations do – to negotiate a better deal for health coverage.
People have been talking about this forever. Easy to say, harder to put into practice.
- We offer individuals who are uninsured, self-employed, or working at a small business a tax credit for health coverage to help them be able to buy a plan and keep it.
About time. They've been talking about this forever, but never do anything. Hopefully they will this time.
FYI for those outside the US. Corporations who purchase health insurance on behalf of their employees get to do so with pre-Tax dollars. An individual who purchases an identical policy must do so with post-Tax dollars. Depending on the tax rate brackets and which state they live in that means that individuals pay an extra 20-50% more for insurance, solely due to taxes.
Given that the individuals in the lower 50% of the income brackets don't pay any taxes, this won't impact the "not quite poor" uninsured at all. The main impact will be on the self-employed small business owners and those who retired before 65. (Not all of whom are rich. I know several individuals who would have preferred to keep working but wound up retiring early when they were laid off due to this lousy economy.) Not a huge number of people impacted but a nice boost for middle class small business owners and as we've been discussing in another thread, the middle class needs all the help it can get!
- We scrap all of ObamaCare’s rating changes and expensive mandates.
Useless politician blather. Sounds great but no specifics.
- We reform – but do not expand – the broken Medicaid entitlement. Too often Medicaid proves the axiom that access to a government health care program is not necessarily access to health care.
Because Medicaid often pays providers so little, roughly half of physicians no longer accept Medicaid patients.
Based on the feedback of many governors, we give states dramatically more flexibility to provide their citizens the health care they need, without all the red tape, micromanagement, and uncertainty from Washington.
I'll believe this when I see it. They've been talking about it for years but no one does anything.
FYI for those used to single payer. There is no requirement that doctors treat Medicaid patients (the government program for the poor). So for the 20% of the population on Medicaid, they have to find doctors who are willing to accept that form of payment. Good luck, even many doctors who accept Medicaid for existing patients won't do so for new ones.