Spekkio
He bowls overhand.
Uhhh, arithmetic? Medicare spending in 2025 was $988 billion (we'll round to $1T), so the ACA is making up the rest of it.How do you figure that? All health care spending, including Medicare, Medicaid and the ACA account for a little over $2 trillion of the total US budget of $7.4 trillion. How is the ACA account for over half of that via 'corporate welfare tax credits'?
Because the ACA obligates the federal government to pay half of corporate healthcare plan costs, which themselves are about half of the total cost of health 'insurance.' That $2,000 / mo plan for a family of 4 obligates Uncle Sam to $1,000 / mo in subsidies to the company. It's estimated that some unknown number between 20 and 50% of that (because private entities don't need to be constantly audited by federal agencies) is passed onto the consumer.
Which means for every dollar a health insurance raises premiums, companies pay $0.25.
There are 134 million full-time working Americans. Fortunately for the US government, not all of them work at large companies and not all of them insure a family of 4.
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