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    The health care debate: popularity, probability, and facts

    Late last week, the Kaiser Family Foundation released a poll showing that Americans have little confidence in the landmark health care reform that President Obama signed into law last year. The Kaiser survey found that just 18 percent of respondents believed that the Affordable Care Act would improve their circumstances; 31 percent said they'd be worse off, while 44 replied that the Act wouldn't make much of a difference in their lives.

    With these findings in view, it's certainly no shock that the Kaiser poll also discovered that a majority of Americans--51 percent--take an unfavorable view of the 2010 health-care overhaul, compared to just 34 percent who viewed the measure favorably. These numbers marked a new low in public support for the law, so the Kaiser survey garnered a great deal of media attention.

    Political leaders and lawmakers of course do well to heed such trends, since the public's views shape both their own immediate career prospects and the likely course of modification to laws such as the Affordable Care Act. But our political process can also benefit greatly from heeding the findings of prediction markets in such cases. These markets can help our political class handicap the probability of certain outcomes. (Of course, whether such outcomes match up in any way with either the public's will--or with the will of the majority of the public--is a separate question, which need not detain us here.)

    One key prediction market, Intrade, currently forecasts a 37 percent likelihood that the U.S. Supreme Court will rule the health care law's controversial individual mandate is unconstitutional by the end of 2012. Under the individual mandate, all U.S. citizens are required to have health insurance; the idea behind it is to keep insurance costs down by eliminating what's known as adverse selection in the market for healthcare.

    However, another future outcome that will affect the future course of the health care debate is actually a piece of the policy aims of the Affordable Care Act: whether the comparative success of the measure in providing coverage to Americans will create a significant constituency to preserve its main provisions. This, after all, is the main source of the popularity of other federal entitlements, such as Social Security and Medicare: They have both garnered enormous support in Washington by creating a sufficiently large public that is pleased with the benefits each program supplies. So in the case of the health care law, too, the question of its material value to most Americans--as opposed to the question of whether Americans think they will or will not benefit from it--will likely be the major source of its ongoing political traction, or lack thereof.

    Last December, the Urban Institute and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation published a study demonstrating that the law will significantly increase access to healthcare for many Americans. Some 27.8 million Americans who are presently uninsured will become insured under the new law, the study found. Another study by the same two nonprofits confirms reports by the Congressional Budget Office and the Rand Corporation finding it unlikely that employers will stop providing coverage to people currently with health insurance due to the law.

    Other studies have disputed these findings, including one from Cornell University Human Ecology Prof. Richard Burkhauser. The conservative American Enterprise Institute has highlighted Burkauser's findings. However, in contrast to the Rand, CBO and Urban Institute research, Burkhauser makes very bold assumptions about the actions of employers and employees in response to the law's impact on existing employer-provided insurance plans. Burkhauser supplies a top bar of 13 million for the number of workers who could leave employer-provided plans in favor of the healthcare exchange.

    In time we will see if the new law turns this chart around. About 50,000,000 Americans were uninsured in 2010:

    Rate of Americans Uninsured for Healthcare

    Data from the United Sates Census Bureau

    Another practical impact of the law will be the way it alters premiums for both the present pool of insured Americans and within the federal health insurance exchanges. Once again, studies have issued conflicting findings on this question. Some conclude that that the higher rate of insurance will save the system money, by reducing the overall number of uninsured Americans and increased competition for the wider pool of insured Americans. Other studies contend that raising the volume of coverage will increase premiums for a substantial number of Americans.

    The most comparable legislation, the Massachusetts health care reform signed into law by then Gov. Mitt Romney, provides some clues to how these fiercely debated policy outcome may yet unfold. The Massachusetts law clearly resulted in a reduction in uninsured people (i.e., increased access to healthcare); more than 98 percent of Massachusetts residents now have health insurance. However, the studies are mixed in their assessments of the ultimate cost of the plan. One thing is clear, however: The Massachusetts reforms are very popular. The Boston Globe reports that poll after poll show majority support for the law and that five years after it was enacted "there is no significant constituency [in Massachusetts] for repeal."

    There's an important moral here, both for our key political actors, and for the public at large: What people believe about the likely impact of a given piece of legislation can be markedly different from its actual impact. It seems likely that the Affordable Care Act, if fully implemented, will end up creating benefits for a great deal more than 18 percent of Americans.

    But there's also a corollary reality-based caution here: What people want to happen can also be very different from what will happen. At the present juncture, Congress and the White House have very little to say about the future implementation of the health care law; that's much more the province of the courts. These subtleties are really important if you are planning for the impact of this law on your business--or if you are thinking about campaigning or voting for or against this law.

    Which leads to my next question: What do you regard as the most important factor in the health care debate? If the Signal wades into the question again, would you prefer to hear more about what the public thinks, what the likely outcomes ahead may be--or what the law itself is likely to accomplish going forward? As always, I look forward to your comments.

    David Rothschild is an economist at Yahoo! Research. He has a Ph.D. in applied economics from the Wharton School of Business at the University of Pennsylvania. His dissertation is in creating aggregated forecasts from individual-level information. Follow him on Twitter @DavMicRot and email him at PredictionBlogger@Yahoo.com.

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    • JillJ  •  6 mths ago
      I am 55 years old, I work for a living, and I have no health insurance. I don't know if the Healthcare Reform Bill will be a benefit to me (I hope it will), or if I will simply be forced to pay for insurance I cannot afford. My gut feeling is that the only ones to truly benefit will be the insurance companies themselves, as usual.
      • Dick 6 mths ago
        You will be able to get insurance and, as a matter of personal responsibility, you should have it.

        It is probably not your intention but as things stand now, if you get really sick or badly injured, you will go bankrupt and the taxpayers (plus people still paying for insurance) will be forced to pay your health care bills.
      • Doug N 6 mths ago
        If you think you can't afford health care, wait until you try to pay for insurance. Since the passage of this fiasco, the price has gone up exponentially.
      • Dick 6 mths ago
        Nonsense Doug - health insurance has been going up every year. The increases this year are close to in line with prior years.

        Mine actually went down.
    • ripcord  •  Harrisburg, United States  •  6 mths ago
      GOOD NEWS FROM OHIO! THEY SAID #$%$ KING OBAMA!Elections - POLITICSOhio Voters Choose to Opt Out of Health Care MandatePublished November 08, 2011| Associated PressCOLUMBUS, Ohio – Voters in Ohio have approved a ballot measure intended to keep government from requiring Ohioans to participate in any health care system.The constitutional amendment passed is largely symbolic, coming in response to the 2009 federal health care overhaul, a provision of which mandates that most Americans purchase health care.Supporters hope it will prompt a challenge of the overhaul before the U.S. Supreme Court.The tea party and Republican groups backing the amendment say the Affordable Care Act was an overreach by the Obama administration and Congress.They hope approval of the ballot issue will bar Ohio from instituting a state-mandated health insurance program like that of Massachusetts.Opponents argued state law can't trump federal law and that the amendment's wording could unintentionally jeopardize state health programs.WE THE PEOPLE OF AMERICA HAVE BEEN LIED TO ENOUGH! 2012!!
    • wilco_56  •  Brandenburg, United States  •  6 mths ago
      I believe the bottom line will be that the Tax Paying American Public will end up paying for free healthcare recipients. Keep in mind this health care coverage is not good enough for the elected officials who forced it on us.
    • BTO33  •  6 mths ago
      Jesus CHRIST, why can we not get this guy to have HIS articles published to the home page. Why can we not have an ACTUAL ECONOMIST have his articles, written FOR Yahoo in the first place, published to the home page? Why do we instead get Zachary Roth (who has no education in the topics he covers) or Rachel Rose Hartment and others (again, no educations in the topics they cover for the most part) getting their UNEDUCATED content published to the home page, often multiple articles per day?

      This is a man with an actual training in economics, an actual economist, and we have to DIG to find his stuff?
      • Yahoo 6 mths ago
        kinda sound like we say about Obama..we want someone with skill and knowlegde not an organizer for chicago.
    • Ess  •  6 mths ago
      Get informed. One can google the facts about the new Healthcare LAW and what it plans to do. It is a good thing- trying to fix a broken system.
      Republican freaks should try to get informed, too, and quit spreading lies about the deal.
    • Ditnap  •  Hershey, United States  •  6 mths ago
      Vote Ron Paul 2012..
      • Christopher 6 mths ago
        I'm not voting for him because he is not electable..period. and if he fragments into a third party..he will screw up the conservative movement by guaranteeing Obama's re-election.... Pretty much how Perot got Clinton elected and defeated Bush......NO Ron Paul must go away and as soon as possible...he is too far right.
    • Doug N  •  6 mths ago
      You gleamed over the cost thing, which is pretty huge. And, yes, people on entitlements stay on entitlements, which is another reason to not start. And, how do the numbers of uninsured fluctuate from 33 million, to 15 million, and now 50 million? This tells me you're making this up as you go. Did you know that 78% of statistics used in political debates are made up on the spot?

      It's common knowledge that regressive liberal democrats will lie through their teeth in order to force through more legislation, see the income tax debate. The regressive liberals said only the top 1% would ever have to pay. Guess what... they lied.

      And, this is supposed to be for Americans. Obama said no illegal aliens will be able to use this nationalized health insurance plan... he lied. If the law remains that hospitals must provide emergency care, and it would be considered racist to check for a green card... how are they supposed to know who are citizens? Hence, the program is set up to fail.
    • Christopher  •  6 mths ago
      People think they are going to get health care for free...They are Not. The cost is going up (Right Now) and the hiring has stopped. If we can somehow repeal most of this bill or Law...we can singularly fix the Deficit.......or come pretty close to fixing it. The almost 30 million people that don't have coverage get taken care of at the hospital. That's not good and we must fix the issue...but it must be done in a less government and bi-partisan manner. The Democrats ...being the Obstructionists they are...blocked all of the Republican suggestions from even getting reviewed. President Obama has lied...he is not bringing people together because he will not compromise and his far left liberal socialist ideology has no place in America. The Democrats are buying votes from all the poor people who have no vested interest in our country...on the backs of the Taxpayers who are tired of the BLOATED social programs we cannot afford...the Unsustainable pensions of the public union sector..(Teachers ) and the excessive burden of government intrusion into business today. This Healthcare Law as it is written will destroy our country....... And if the unions think jobs are flying overseas...wait till this medical cost burden hits our pocketbook in 2014 and see what happens. We re falling apart at the seams here with no leader.....only a very young and inexperienced President who is failing at everything.

      And you know why Democrats held off having this Healthcare law kick in until 2014...because if it kicked in on an election year...there would be no way he would even be considered by anybody for re-election...it will get so bad for our economy and jobs are gone!
      • ripcord 6 mths ago
        That's right, sir, you don't know, because you are not smart enough to know what your self appointed betters are doing to you in Washington. I am in the business and have followed this monster from the beginning. It was never ment to make things better for America, it is written to wreak you health care as you know it, and have the government take over everything.
        ALL THEY REQUIRE OF YOU IS TO SHUT UP, LAY YOUR HEAD DOWN, AND VOTE DEMOCRAT.
    • William Brewer  •  Indianapolis, United States  •  6 mths ago
      An issue no one ever raises on this is:

      Under this law, all Americans are required to participate. That means the heroin addict on the corner is YOUR responsibility now, despite the fact they are purposely causing injury to themselves.
      Also, when will the Feds, under guise of "health care", begin to regulate your diet? force periods of exercise?
      No, there are too many negatives to this legislation, too many unanswered questions, and too much (possible) power given to the Feds, for me to support this.
      • Bert 6 mths ago
        The heroin addict on the corner is already our responsibility,ever time he goes to the ER we pay in the form of higher hospital and doctor bills so whats the difference?
      • William Brewer 6 mths ago
        I'm not FORCED to purchase something just for being American, right now. I have some FREEDOM on the issue.
        THAT is the difference, FREEDOM.
    • Melissa  •  6 mths ago
      The American people will know whats in the health care bill after its passed. Thanks democrats for lying again. We will remember in 2012.
    • joe  •  6 mths ago
      The bottom line is that Republicans are very good at lying to the American people.

    About The Signal

    The Signal is the Yahoo! News predictions blog featuring real-time forecasts and sentiment on politics, economics, and more. MEET THE TEAM: David Pennock, David Rothschild

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