Millions across the country will discover just how much their plans will cost when open enrollment for Affordable Care Act insurance plans begins on Nov. 1.
This has the potential for a death spiral on all of the US economy. 1. its highly inflationary. 2. People choosing to not have health insurance is a drop in GDP, and a cause of hospital closures which is another drop in GDP, and access to healthcare. People dying hurts GDP too.
US economy already is highly inflated due to 5% points of GDP higher than every other nation spent on healthcare. Obamacare/ACA was a republican compromise to prevent Berniecare/mediare for all. The GOP criticisms that public subsidies for private extortion just makes the private extortion harsher. But only Berniecare is the answer.
I’m no expert, but i suppose because it reduces the flow of money - fewer transactions (people not getting healthcare, not billing insurance, insurance not paying for healthcare given to people because they’re not getting any healthcare) = reduced total domestic product. Whether it’s reduced by a measurable amount is another question.
This has the potential for a death spiral on all of the US economy. 1. its highly inflationary. 2. People choosing to not have health insurance is a drop in GDP, and a cause of hospital closures which is another drop in GDP, and access to healthcare. People dying hurts GDP too.
US economy already is highly inflated due to 5% points of GDP higher than every other nation spent on healthcare. Obamacare/ACA was a republican compromise to prevent Berniecare/mediare for all. The GOP criticisms that public subsidies for private extortion just makes the private extortion harsher. But only Berniecare is the answer.
Why would GDP drop if people stopped having insurance? (Serious question)
both your insurance payments and healthcare costs/wages count as GDP.
I’m no expert, but i suppose because it reduces the flow of money - fewer transactions (people not getting healthcare, not billing insurance, insurance not paying for healthcare given to people because they’re not getting any healthcare) = reduced total domestic product. Whether it’s reduced by a measurable amount is another question.
I think also the fact that sick people usually don’t work, and in the US they don’t get paid when sick, so less money available to be spent.