- The individual mandate is an enforcement nightmare.
As a candidate, President Obama worried that an individual mandate to buy
insurance would be unenforceable. He changed his mind once he became president.
This year—the first year that the mandate penalties are to be imposed—he has
already started backtracking on the enforcement of the provision he signed into
law.
- The law will create new disincentives to work.
Between Obamacare’s higher taxes and its subsidies
that drop off if you raise your income, there’s not a lot of incentive here to
work harder and better your situation.
- The law, particularly the employer mandate,
will impose new costs on businesses that undercut jobs and wages.
The employer mandate has been delayed until 2015, but the uncertainty
Obamacare has created—and its 18 new tax hikes—have put a
huge dent in job creation.
- The law undermines competition and further consolidates health
insurance markets.
Heritage Foundation analysis of federal and state exchanges shows that the
law has, in general, reduced competition and consolidated health insurance
markets. Between 2013 and 2014, the number of insurers offering coverage on the
individual markets in all 50 states has declined nationwide by 29 percent.
- The law guarantees major premium increases.
As Heritage predicted, the average annual premiums for single and family
coverage in 2014 are rising in the state and federal
health insurance exchanges all around the country. In 11 states, premiums for
27-year-olds have more than doubled since 2013; in 13 states, premiums for
50-year-olds have increased more than 50 percent.
Get more details on all of these Obamacare effects
- The law discourages insurance enrollment among the young.
The law’s insurance rules and new benefit mandates will make it cheaper for
many younger Americans simply to remain uninsured and pay the penalty fine.
It’s not surprising that young people have been staying away.
- The law’s Medicare savings would not financially strengthen Medicare.
The law’s proponents originally promised that “savings” from Medicare
changes would be spent simultaneously in two places: helping Medicare and
expanding Obamacare. But money can be spent only
once, so that didn’t work.
- The law’s Medicare changes will result in reduced benefits and
threaten seniors’ access to care.
The law’s impact is fairly straightforward: Fewer Medicare providers,
reimbursed at rates progressively reduced over time, will create access
problems for patients. Medicare cuts have been underway for several years now.
- The law compels taxpayers to fund abortion and weakens protections of
the right of conscience.
Obamacare mandates health plans that include
coverage of abortion. It also spawned the Health and Human Services regulatory
mandate that forces American employers to provide coverage for
abortion-inducing drugs. It is safe to say that four
years ago, millions of Americans did not expect that the national health care
law would become a vehicle for an aggressive government infringement of
personal liberty or coerce Americans to fund medical procedures and drugs in
direct violation of their ethical and religious convictions.