Calculating Subsidies In Health Care

Filed in National by on December 27, 2009

To see if you’d receive subsidies from HCR, check out this interesting little calculator from the Kaiser Family Foundation.

This tool illustrates premiums and government assistance under the types of reform proposals being considered in Congress for people under age 65 who purchase coverage on their own in an Exchange and are not covered through their employer, Medicare or Medicaid. While the proposals considered would not take effect for several years (2013 in the House and 2014 in the Senate), the results are presented in terms of 2009 premium and income levels to enable better comparisons to current circumstances. The tool allows the user to start with the provisions from one of several proposals and examine the impact at different income levels. Advanced settings allow users to change assumptions to show the effect of different policy choices.

I’m a sucker for tools like this, mainly because I like it when someone does the work for me.  And, like most people, I need to see the actual dollar amounts.

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A stay-at-home mom with an obsession for National politics.

Comments (5)

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  1. just kiddin says:

    Single Payer….you would paying zero.

  2. pandora says:

    Remind me again… who ran on Single Payer?

  3. cassandra m says:

    And can I just point out the magical thinking behind single payer?

    Taxpayers do pay for single payer, and in most of the European single payer plans you do have a small co-pay. There are NO medical coverage systems on the planet that are not paid for by somebody — and that somebody is always taxpayers.

  4. Tom S says:

    “I like it when someone does the work for me” – also a good summation of govt health care.

  5. “Don’t Put Too Much Faith In Kaiser Foundation Subsidy Calculator –

    The Kasier Family Foundation subsidies calculator is a useful but flawed tool. They can not actually predict what the exact growth rate in premiums will be between now and when reform starts, so the calculator ignores this important variable by making all the calculations based on today’s costs and wages. ”

    http://fdlaction.firedoglake.com/2009/12/28/dont-put-too-much-faith-in-kaiser-foundation-subsidy-calculator/