So the Congressional Budget Office's numbers are out. Sort of.
While we now have an official document from the CBO evaluating
the Democratic health care proposals, the analysis opens with this following
cautionary note:
Although CBO completed a preliminary review of legislative
language prior to its release, the agency has not thoroughly
examined the reconciliation proposal to verify its consistency
with the previous draft. This estimate is therefore
preliminary, pending a review of the language of the
reconciliation proposal, as well as further review and
refinement of the budgetary projections.
What basically happened is that Democrats were rushing to get out
the CBO scores so that they could have some sort of claim to have
released them 72 hours prior to a vote, which they want to hold
on Sunday. But we won't have 72 hours to look at the actual final
scores.
An initial reading of the report suggests that Democrats employed
similar accounting gimmicks as in previous iterations of the
health care bill, while making up a shortfall with more cuts to
Medicare Advantage, siphoning money from the Student loan bill,
and raising taxes further. While I'll go into further detail
later once I've had a chance to look at all of the moving parts,
and analyze the actual bill itself, one thing worth highlighting
is that as expected, Democrats have maintained the strategy of
delaying the major spending provisions until 2014 to create the
appearance that the bill is cheaper over the CBO's ten year
budget window, from 2010 through 2019. In this version, the bill
spends $17 billion in the first four years, while the remaining
$923 billion, or 98 percent, is spent in the next six years. I've
illustrated this tactic in the chart below. One thing to note is
that the oft-quoted $940 billion number only pertains to the cost
of expanding coverage -- which is the bulk of spending in the
bill -- but it does not include all other costs, such as the
providing more Medicare prescription drug subsidies, which costs
about $38 billion. I've used the $940 billion figure in the chart
below, but have specified that it's only the cost of the coverage
provisions.