A benefits specialist looks ahead and sees... something for all. Not Medicare.
By Craig Gottwals | March 25, 2020 at 03:30 AM
Full story at ThinkAdviser
Full story at ThinkAdviser
COVID-19 could change things. But I believe that, unless there’s a severe disruption in our economy such as a deep, long-lasting recession, depression or runway inflation, U.S. health care will be largely socialized by 2030.
The 2021 Supreme Court Head Fake
As the third time the Supreme Court decided to hear an ACA case, this generated a multitude of stories over the first few days of March. The case revolves around the legality of the ACA now that penalties (taxes) for violations of the individual mandate have been reduced to $0 under federal law. Texas and nearly half of all states argue that because the Supreme Court previously held that the individual mandate is integral to the function of the ACA, its nullification in December 2017 under the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act necessitates the collapse of the entire law.
Frankly, it is a clever and plausible argument since the Supreme Court already held that the ACA’s individual mandate is not severable to the law’s proper function. Nevertheless, it is an extraneous issue at this point. America’s path on health care is clear and will follow the country’s movement toward more government and socialization. ...
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