
The Affordable Care Act’s Lower-Than-Projected Premiums Will Save $190 Billion
Due to the health law’s lower premiums, its deficit reduction will increase by 174 percent.
Contributor
Due to the health law’s lower premiums, its deficit reduction will increase by 174 percent.
Jonathan Gruber, MIT economist and former special advisor to the president on health care, explains the benefits of reform and why the individual mandate is necessary.
Jonathan Gruber asks you to test your knowledge with this interactive quiz on the Affordable Care Act.
Jonathan Gruber finds that no alternative to the individual mandate can cover more than two-thirds as many uninsured as the Affordable Care Act does.
Repealing the Affordable Care Act would be an enormous step backward for health care in our country, for the income security of our citizens, and for the fiscal health of our government, writes Jonathan Gruber.
The individual mandate is essential to making health care affordable for everyone, write Jonathan Gruber and Judy Feder.
Jonathan Gruber examines the costs of partially repealing the Affordable Care Act in certain states.
Without a mandate, health reform would cover fewer people and impose higher premiums on those who buy insurance, writes Jonathan Gruber.