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CORNHUSKER4PALIN

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Surprise! CBO Says Obamacare Costs $115B More

Seeded on Wed May 12, 2010 11:47 PM EDT
Read ArticleArticle Source: The Fox Nation
health, obama, congress, political, spending, obamacare, socialized-medicine, hidden-costs
Seeded by Cornhusker4Palin
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President Barack Obama's new health care law could potentially add at least $115 billion more to government health care spending over the next 10 years, congressional budget referees said Tuesday.

If Congress approves all the additional spending called for in the legislation, it would push the ten-year cost of the overhaul above $1 trillion—an unofficial limit the Obama administration set early on.

The Congressional Budget Office said the added spending includes $10 billion to $20 billion in administrative costs to federal agencies carrying out the law, as well as $34 billion for community health centers and $39 billion for Indian health care.

The costs were not reflected in earlier estimates by the budget office, although Republican lawmakers strenuously argued that they should have been.

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AlphaDogReporter

OMB HOME • Wednesday, May 12th, 2010 at 2:56 pm

A New Round of Old Questions on Health Insurance Reform

Peter R. Orszag, Director

A Congressional Budget Office (CBO) letter released yesterday has sparked a new round of old questions about the cost of the recently enacted health insurance reform law, the Affordable Care Act. The letter simply updates CBO's calculation of the size of discretionary authorizations included in the legislation. CBO's tally, which is not included in its estimate of the cost of the law, has led some to erroneously conclude that the law includes more spending and less deficit reduction than CBO has previously reported.

As I have said before and independent analysts have echoed, this is incorrect: Authorizations are just that — they are not spending. That is, they are expressions of what Congress would like to spend money on, not what it will spend money on. This is important since Congress frequently does not fully fund authorizations and many are never funded. As CBO itself says in the letter, authorizations "are subject to future appropriation actions, which could result in greater or smaller costs than the sums authorized by the legislation."

The President has made a firm commitment to freezing non-security discretionary funding for the next three years — a commitment he has said would be enforced by his veto pen. As a result, any actual new funding would have to fit within this freeze and so would have to be offset by budget cuts elsewhere. It is also worth noting that a number of these authorizations — including the largest authorization reported in the CBO letter — are simply new authorizations of spending that already exists. In other words, funding such authorizations does not result in new spending.

The bottom line remains the same: the Affordable Care Act is the largest deficit reduction package enacted in over a decade according to CBO. It will reduce deficits by more than $100 billion in the current decade and more than $1 trillion in the decade after that — and that will not change.

    Reply#1 - Thu May 13, 2010 1:12 AM EDT
    Doug-375144

    No suprise there , most new it was all smoke and mirrors and a money swap from the git go .

    • 1 vote
    Reply#2 - Thu May 13, 2010 1:13 AM EDT
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