Indeed, that's a good catch. Non-covered.
Of course....thinking about it for a bit, I imagine many of those <1M may be people who fall into the coverage gap of people in states that haven't expanded Medicaid; those whose AGI is more than 138% of poverty line in non-Medicaid expanding state but less than the private exchange ACA subsidy line. As you well know, this is a problem still centered around the SCOTUS case in 2012 and conscious Republican intransigence in said states (FL, TX, etc.) for not taking the expanded Medicaid poverty line definition. All entirely avoidable if not for politics, in other words, and really having nothing to do with a "flaw" in the ACA, other than it not anticipating the extent of conservative obstruction in two branches of gov't.
Whatever helps you sleep at night.
Something interesting from ccchr's Forbes article:
Notably, RAND finds that outside of employer-sponsored insurance, Obamacares impact on the uninsured has been minimal thus fara net of 1.1 million between Medicaid (+5.9 million), the exchanges (+3.9 million), off-exchange individually-purchased insurance (-1.6 million), and other forms of insurance, such as coverage for federal employees and the military (-7.1 million).
It appears that the main group signing up through the exchanges are not the uninsured, but those who already had health insurance and are taking the opportunity to get it more cheaply. Outside of employer-furnished health insurance, the number of those who now have health insurance thanks to the ACA (1.1 million) is little more than the number of those who now don't have health insurance thanks to the ACA (< 1 million.) Not too impressive.
If I were a Democrat politician (Heaven forbid!) running in a red state, I'd be slamming the Medicaid expansion message every opportunity. My daughter-in-law is one of those who lost her (crappy) health insurance and is unable to afford an Obamacare policy - she just doesn't make enough money to pay enough tax to get enough subsidy to make an ACA-compliant policy affordable. (And the stupid facilitators sold her a policy she could afford - a life insurance policy!) There have to be a lot of people in that situation.
Also from his quoted article:
I highlight that as your post seems to imply everyone had to pay more for coverage.
No, my post implied that the Obamacare policy was more expensive, which except perhaps for New York is pretty much universally true. It's just that for a lot of people, it's either paid straight out of their taxes via subsidies or someone else pays it.
I have mixed feelings about that. I disliked it initially, but now I'm coming around. Health insurance is pretty important - why should government get its money before one buys health insurance? It's not like there is any fiscal restraint in federal government borrowing aside from the ACA, so it makes sense to let people use that money for health insurance instead of paying it in taxes.
Where does that quote come from?
I can't find it in the OP's link.
IIRC, the last year's CBO estimate they predicted only 1 million new insured from the ranks of the employed. That's much different than the Rand results.
Read more:
http://www.businessinsider.com/obamacare-rand-study-uninsured-rate-esi-2014-4#ixzz2yRS1rCU5
Unless the CBO did a much more recent estimate I don't think it's helpful to quote their numbers.
I'd also like to know what they meant by "grandfathered plans".
Fern
The additional numbers of people receiving health insurance from their employer kind of makes sense. One push in Obamacare was to force employers to provide health insurance. I know several people whose hours were cut back to avoid qualifying for health insurance under the new guidelines, but it cannot be practical for employers to cut the hours of everyone who did not qualify for health insurance under the old rules but do under the new rules. People whose hours were cut are a net wash, but those people who now get health insurance are a net gain, so the overall effect would be positive. With the economy still slowly gathering steam and employers more and more turning to part time workers, it makes sense that more employees would have to be covered.