The House plan really is progressive reform
See two notes at the end, where I point to one unfinished part of this analysis and also show how my approach is similar to and different from that of Nate Sliver at 538. With the possibility that a public option won’t be part of the health care reform legislation passed this year, progressives are looking more closely at the rest of the legislation. And some of them have been worried by what they are seeing. For even when subsidies are applied in the Exchange, moderate income families will pay a substantial amount for health care in both premiums and out of pocket expenditures. Some progressive are asking how we can justify asking moderate income families to pay so much for health care? But, in fact, the health insurance program that would be created under the House legislation would be highly beneficial to moderate income families. Subsidized insurance under the Exchange… Continue reading