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Published Thu, Oct 08, 2009 05:04 AM
Modified Thu, Oct 08, 2009 07:31 AM

Baucus health bill gets a boost

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- The Associated Press

WASHINGTON -- Health care legislation drafted by a key Senate committee would expand coverage to 94 percent of all eligible Americans at a 10-year cost of $829 billion, congressional budget experts said Wednesday.

The preliminary estimate was trumpeted by the White House and is likely to power the measure past a major hurdle within days.

The Congressional Budget Office added that the legislation would reduce federal deficits by $81 billion over a decade and probably lead to "continued reductions in federal" red ink in the years beyond.

The report paves the way for the Senate Finance Committee to vote as soon as early next week on the legislation, which is largely in line with President Barack Obama's call for the most sweeping overhaul of the nation's health care system in a half-century.

At the White House, spokesman Reid Cherlin said the analysis "confirms that we can provide stability and security for Americans with insurance and affordable options for uninsured Americans without adding a dime to the deficit and saving money over the long term."

Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., the committee chairman and principal architect of the measure, hailed the estimates within moments of receiving them.

"This legislation, I believe, is a smart investment on our federal balance sheet. It's an even smarter investment for American families, businesses and our economy," he said on the Senate floor.

Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa, the senior Republican on the panel, saw it differently. "A celebration of the deficit effects masks who pays the bills. This package includes hundreds of billions of dollars in new taxes and fees," he said in a statement.

The committee Baucus chairs is the fifth and last of the congressional panels to debate health care.

The Senate Finance version has a decided middle-of-the-road flavor, shunning any provision for the government to sell insurance in competition with private industry. That provision, strongly favored by many Democrats and just as strongly opposed by Republicans, remains alive, though. It was included in legislation approved by another Senate committee, and is also expected to be included in the House bill.

The Finance Committee bill does not require businesses to offer coverage to their workers, either, although large firms that do not would be required to offset the cost of any government subsidies going to those employees.

While generally positive about the legislation's effects, the report contained important caveats:

One noted that the estimate does not include the costs of proposed payment increases for doctors serving Medicare patients, roughly $200 billion through 2019.

Additionally, a so-called fail-safe mechanism to hold spending in line could result in cuts as large as 15 percent in federal subsidies designed to help the poor afford insurance, CBO said.

Beginning in 2013, the measure would require that millions of Americans purchase private insurance for the first time, and would set up a new marketplace where policies would be available. Failure to obey the requirement would result in penalties of up to $750 per family.

Federal subsidies would be available to millions of lower-income individuals and families to help defray the cost of coverage that would otherwise be out of their reach. The alternative to government-sold health care, a proposal for nonprofit co-ops that would compete with private companies, was judged largely ineffective by budget officials.

The legislation also would ban current insurance industry practices that deny coverage on the basis of pre-existing medical conditions, and restrict companies' ability to charge vastly higher premiums on the basis of age, gender or other factors.

The measure would be paid for through a variety of tax increases and spending cuts, including savings of hundreds of billions of dollars from Medicare, the federal health care program for seniors.

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A deep hole

The federal budget deficit tripled to a record $1.4 trillion for the 2009 fiscal year that ended last week, the Congressional Budget Office said Wednesday.

The unprecedented flood of red ink flows from several factors, including a big drop in tax revenues during the recession, $245 billion in emergency spending on the Wall Street bailout, and the takeover of mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Then there is almost $200 billion from President Barack Obama's economic stimulus plan, as well as increases in programs such as unemployment benefits and food stamps.

The previous record deficit was $459 billion, set last year.

The Associated Press

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