It's a WSJ article so it may expire before this thread does...
Three key points:
* Doesn't add to federal deficit
* Less than $900 billion over ten years
* 94% of Americans would be covered
Obviously, loads of uncertainty when you go out to ten years, but there y'are...CBO scoring...
I predict that it sails through committee and sees the floor before the end of the month
[Note] Click link, then click first search result
CBO: Senate Finance Health Plan Trims Deficit By $81B[/b] - A health overhaul proposal from Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., got a boost Wednesday from the Congressional Budget Office, which said the bill wouldn't add to the deficit through 2019 and probably would continue to raise more money for the government than it costs after that time.
The widely awaited preliminary estimate from CBO found that the bill would reduce the deficit by $81 billion through 2019.
CBO said the gross cost of the bill comes to $829 billion over that time. That includes the cost of subsidies for the uninsured to purchase health coverage, increased spending on Medicaid and children's health programs, and tax credits for small businesses.
That cost is offset by revenues from a excise tax on high-cost insurance plans and savings from cuts in government payments to health providers, among other sources.
Three key points:
* Doesn't add to federal deficit
* Less than $900 billion over ten years
* 94% of Americans would be covered
Obviously, loads of uncertainty when you go out to ten years, but there y'are...CBO scoring...
I predict that it sails through committee and sees the floor before the end of the month
[Note] Click link, then click first search result