Saturday, April 4, 2026
ADVT 
International

Study Finds 20 Million Would Lose Health Coverage Under Trump Plan

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Sep, 2016 11:10 AM
    WASHINGTON — A new study that examines some major health care proposals from the presidential candidates finds that Donald Trump would cause about 20 million to lose coverage while Hillary Clinton would provide coverage for an additional 9 million people.
     
    The 2016 presidential campaign has brought voters to a crossroads on health care yet again. The U.S. uninsured rate stands at a historically low 8.6 per cent, mainly because of President Barack Obama's health care law, which expanded government and private coverage. Yet it's uncertain if the nation's newest social program will survive the election.
     
    Republican candidate Trump would repeal "Obamacare" and replace it with a new tax deduction, insurance market changes, and a Medicaid overhaul. Democrat Clinton would increase financial assistance for people with private insurance and expand government coverage as well.
     
    The two approaches would have starkly different results, according to the Commonwealth Fund study released Friday.
     
    The analysis was carried out by the RAND Corporation, a global research organization that uses computer simulation to test the potential effects of health care proposals. Although the New York-based Commonwealth Fund is nonpartisan, it generally supports the goals of increased coverage and access to health care.
     
    Economist Sara Collins, who heads the Commonwealth Fund's work on coverage and access, said RAND basically found that Trump's replacement plan isn't robust enough to make up for the insurance losses from repealing the Affordable Care Act. "Certainly it doesn't fully offset the effects of repeal," Collins said.
     
     
    One worrisome finding is that the number of uninsured people in fair or poor health could triple under Trump. It would rise from an estimated 2.1 million people under current laws to between 5.7 million and 7.1 million under Trump's approach, depending on which of his policy proposals was analyzed.
     
    When uninsured people wind up in the hospital, the cost of their treatment gets shifted to others, including state and federal taxpayers. Trump has said he doesn't want people "dying on the street."
     
    The study panned one of Trump's main ideas: allowing insurers to sell private policies across state lines. Collins said insurers would cherry-pick the healthiest customers and steer them to skimpy plans. Other experts don't see it as bleakly, believing that interstate policies could attract customers through lower premiums.
     
    A prominent Republican expert who reviewed the study for The Associated Press questioned some of its assumptions, but said the overall conclusion seems to be on target. "You could quibble about some of the modeling, but directionally I think it's right," said economist Douglas Holtz-Eakin, president of the American Action Forum, a centre-right public policy centre.
     
    Collins said the analysis examined some major proposals from each candidate, but did not test every idea.
     
     
    The Trump proposals included repealing the Obama health care law, as well as a host of replacement ideas consisting of a new income tax deduction for health insurance, allowing policies to be sold across state lines, and turning the Medicaid program for low-income people into a block grant, which would mean limiting federal costs.
     
    The study estimated that Trump's repeal of "Obamacare" would increase the number of uninsured people from 24.9 million to 44.6 million in 2018. But then his replacement proposals would have a push-pull effect. The tax deduction and interstate health insurance sales would help some stay covered, but the Medicaid block grant would make even more people uninsured.
     
    "The people who would actually gain coverage tend to have higher incomes," said Collins.
     
    The result would be an estimated 45.1 million uninsured people in 2018 under Trump — an increase of 20.2 million, reversing the coverage gains under Obama.
     
    The Clinton proposals analyzed included a new tax credit for deductibles and copayments not covered by insurance, a richer formula for health law subsidies, a fix for the law's "family glitch" that can deny subsidies to some dependents, and a new government-sponsored "public option" health plan.
     
    Taken together, the analysis estimated that Clinton's proposals would reduce the number of uninsured people in 2018 to 15.8 million, which translates to a gain of 9.1 million people with coverage. Not included were Clinton's idea for allowing middle-aged adults to buy into Medicare and her plan to convince more states to expand Medicaid.
     
     
     
    Collins said the researchers will update their estimates for both campaigns as more details become available.
     
    The health care report follows another recent analysis that delved into the candidates' tax proposals. That study by the nonpartisan Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget found that Trump's latest tax proposals would increase federal debt by $5.3 trillion over the next decade, compared with $200 billion if Clinton's ideas were enacted. The Trump campaign disputed those findings.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Justin Trudeau Trip Like A Blast To The Past: A Comparison To Past Pm Visits To U.S.

    This month will feel like a blast to a long-lost past where Canadian prime ministers visited the United States frequently and received considerable attention while doing so.

    Justin Trudeau Trip Like A Blast To The Past: A Comparison To Past Pm Visits To U.S.

    Hundreds Expected At Gay Wedding Expo In Utah

    Hundreds Expected At Gay Wedding Expo In Utah
    Utah is one of 29 states where it is legal for businesses to refuse services to same-sex couples, according to the Human Rights Campaign. A proposal to change that law died last week in the Utah's Republican-controlled legislation.

    Hundreds Expected At Gay Wedding Expo In Utah

    Canadians Want Americans To Pay More Attention To The World, Says Justin Trudeau In '60 Minutes'

    Canadians Want Americans To Pay More Attention To The World, Says Justin Trudeau In '60 Minutes'
    The "60 Minutes" profile of Trudeau will air just days before he travels to the White House for a state visit.

    Canadians Want Americans To Pay More Attention To The World, Says Justin Trudeau In '60 Minutes'

    Ami Bera Backs 2 Indian-American Women Running For Office

    Ami Bera Backs 2 Indian-American Women Running For Office
    Bera is supporting Kesha Ram, who is running for Lieutenant Governor in Vermont, and Pramila Jayapal, who is running for Congress in Washington state's 7th Congressional District.

    Ami Bera Backs 2 Indian-American Women Running For Office

    Ontario Judge Approves $20.6m Settlement In Scotiabank Overtime Class-action Suit

    Judge Edward Belobaba of the Ontario Superior Court approved the settlement Thursday, with written reasons to follow in the coming weeks

    Ontario Judge Approves $20.6m Settlement In Scotiabank Overtime Class-action Suit

    Turkish Court Sentences 2 Men In Death Of Migrant Boy Alan Kurdi

    Turkish Court Sentences 2 Men In Death Of Migrant Boy Alan Kurdi
    The court in the Aegean resort of Bodrum convicted the two of human trafficking but acquitted them of the charge of causing the drowning deaths through deliberate negligence, the agency said.

    Turkish Court Sentences 2 Men In Death Of Migrant Boy Alan Kurdi