The Impacts of the Affordable Care Act: How Reasonable Are the Projections?
Author(s)
Gruber, Jonathan
DownloadGruber_The Impacts.pdf (220.1Kb)
OPEN_ACCESS_POLICY
Open Access Policy
Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike
Terms of use
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) is the most comprehensive reform of the U.S. medical system in at least 45 years. The ACA transforms the non-group insurance market in the United States, mandates that most residents have health insurance, significantly expands public insurance and subsidizes private insurance coverage, raises revenues from a variety of new taxes, and reduces and reorganizes spending under the nation’s largest health insurance plan, Medicare. Projecting the impacts of such fundamental reform to the health care system is fraught with difficulty. But such projections were required for the legislative process, and were delivered by the Congressional Budget Office (CBO). This paper discusses the projected impact of the ACA in more detail, and describes the evidence that sheds light upon the accuracy of the projections. It begins by reviewing in broad details the structure of the ACA and then reviews evidence from a key case study that informs our understanding of the ACA’s impacts: a comparable health reform that was carried out in Massachusetts four years earlier. The paper discusses the key results from that earlier reform and what they might imply for the impacts of the ACA. The paper ends with a discussion of the projected impact of the ACA and offers some observations on those estimates.
Date issued
2011-06Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of EconomicsJournal
Working paper series (National Bureau of Economic Research)
Publisher
National Bureau of Economic Research
Citation
Gruber, Jonathan. "THE IMPACTS OF THE AFFORDABLE CARE ACT: HOW REASONABLE ARE THE PROJECTIONS?" Working paper series (National Bureau of Economic Research), working paper 17168. National Bureau of Economic Research, (June 2011). 26 p.
Version: Author's final manuscript
Other identifiers
NBER Working Paper No. 17168
ISSN
0898-2937