The Congressional Budget Office has estimated that the House
Democratic health care bill that I
summarized below would cost more than $1 trillion over ten
years (subject to revision once it evaluates the entire bill).
Michelle Malkin
noted earlier that it's more like a five year estimate, and I
thought it would be worthwhile to add some specific numbers to
flesh out that argument.
It's important to keep in mind that the most costly aspects of
the legislation involve providing subsidies to individuals to
purchase health care ($773 billion) and to expand Medicaid ($438
billion), but it takes several years for those provisions to kick
in. As you can see from the chart below, that means that the
costs start out relatively modest but ramp up over time. In the
first three years of the plan the cost of the subsidies and
Medicaid expansion is just $8 billion; in the first five years,
it's $202 billion; but in the last five years, it's $979 billion.
Put another way, 17 percent of the spending comes in the first
five years, while 83 percent comes in the second five years. What
this means is that the American people see $1 trillion over 10
years and they think that means the bill would cost about $100
billion a year -- but the reality is more than double that. In
the final year of the CBO estimates, 2019, the spending hits $230
billion.