While Republican senators working on ACA repeal will doubtless screw up the individual market for health insurance, they are not planning to spend less money on it. All of their spending cuts -- needed to pay for tax cuts -- will come out of Medicaid's hide. Since the Medicaid expansion they're planning to repeal is a roaring success, they're following the House in diverting everyone's attention with emotionally fraught questions about individual market structure.
According to Vox's Dylan Scott, Senate Republicans are near agreement on the basic outline of their Medicaid cuts -- they will roll back the expansion over more or less years and impose per capita caps on all Medicaid spending, as Ryan's AHCA does. As for the individual market:
According to Vox's Dylan Scott, Senate Republicans are near agreement on the basic outline of their Medicaid cuts -- they will roll back the expansion over more or less years and impose per capita caps on all Medicaid spending, as Ryan's AHCA does. As for the individual market:
There’s broad agreement to increase the money the House bill would spend subsidizing Americans who buy insurance on the individual market. That increase would probably improve, at least somewhat, the Congressional Budget Office’s projection that the House bill would cause 23 million fewer Americans to have health insurance a decade from now.In fact, any improvement to the AHCA individual market design and funding will improve CBO's uninsured estimate for the AHCA only marginally. In CBO's forecast, the individual market will insure only two million fewer people under the AHCA than under current law ten years from now (though enrollees will be wealthier, younger and more skimpily covered, and most of the roughly 7 million ACA enrollees with incomes under 200% FPL will likely be priced out).