CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE'S TAKE ON HEALTHCARE BILL
The good news, substantively and politically, is that CBO expects the measure would reduce budget deficits by $81 billion over the next decade and by even larger sums in the following decade. . .
The coverage news is not quite so good--although, to be honest, it's better than I expected, given the rumors . . . CBO estimates that, as of 2019, 94 percent of legal non-elderly residents and 91 percent of all non-elderly residents would have insurance.
That's significantly lower than the projections from the House bill, which would result in corresponding figures of 97 percent and 94 percent. In raw numbers, it's the difference between 25 million people (Senate Finance bill) and 17 million (House bills) still uninsured ten years from now.
Of course, those numbers involve a lot of uncertainty. Their significance is that they correspond to a particular level of benefits and financial assistance, at least in the calculations of the CBO.
And this is something we've known for a while: The Senate Finance bill isn't as generous or as protective as it ought to be.
But the fact that the measure would actually save money means, or should mean, there's a bit more room (financially and politically) to throw additional funds at expanding/improving insurance coverage--ideally, by raising a little more money in taxes and/or offsetting savings.
Remember, the difference between covering people at the level of the Senate Finance bill and covering something close to all legal residents is maybe $150 billion over ten years. That's not a lot of money in the grand scheme of things.

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