BigBallinStalin wrote:So, bottomline, there seems to be a ton of questions which have the answer "not really sure, time will tell." There doesn't seem to be a concrete answer on the cost for each individual as well the as the cost for the company (and on later expected costs). That annual individual cost seems to be more of an educated guess.
Aside from costs, there seems to be more potential problems--foreseeable and not foreseeable, but many are still willing to take the risk.
Is this more or less what this thread provided us here?
The Obama administration has said they want a "budget nuetral" option. No one can talk specifically about costs, because nothing is yet set.
Here are some ideas being floated. Who knows which will prevail (likely none of them!).
1. Increased taxes on soda pop and other "non-food" foods.
Benefit -- moves people toward a healthier lifestyle
Negatives -- probably will harm poor people most (unless you consider limiting their ability to purchase these items a positive -- due to health benefits), likely won't provide enough money, particularly in the long term. (either tax will be so high it will truly inhibit purchases and thus limit income potential or it will be low and therefore not collect enough money). Also, will place a burden on various businesses.
2. Healthier people, people getting care in a more timely manner and not waiting until they have true emergencies.
Benefits -- very real on all fronts. People WILL be healthier, mostly will seek out care earliers, etc. In the long term, costs will be cheaper overall.
Negatives -- a lot of people already have illnesses compounded by poor medical care. Ironically, they will likely form a surge of people seeking help and initially boost costs. Benefits/cost savings will take time to come. Also, as people are healthier, they will live longer. So, there is a potential trade-off. We may save on care earlier in life, but have greater costs later.
3. Extra taxes on the wealthy. Take various forms.
Justification -- the justification is twofold. One, they make more and can better afford the extra tax. Two, they have benefitted disproportionatly from previous tax breaks, still benefit more from all sorts of social services, etc. This is, of course, debated but it is the argument.
Benefits-- more money from just a few people
Negatives -- Those few people create the most jobs and will simply leave, taking jobs with them. (again, highly debated)
4. Curb waste/fraud/frivolous lawsuits. (various plans)
Benefits -- obvious.
Negatives -- hard to achieve, takes time, may not really provide the savings needed
There are likely more ideas out there, but those are the ones I have heard about.