All told, the proposal would reduce the federal deficit by $12 billion in 2019, CBO and JCT estimate. After that, the added revenues and cost savings are projected to grow more rapidly than the cost of the coverage expansion. Consequently, CBO expects that the proposal, if enacted, would reduce federal budget deficits over the ensuing decade relative to those projected under current law--with a total effect during that decade that is in a broad range between one-quarter percent and one-half percent of GDP.
« Washington, DC, Leads Nation in Being Green, Hating Hitler | Main | The Baucus Bill Cuts The Deficit »
Oct 7 2009, 4:47 pm by Derek Thompson
CBO: The Baucus Bill Bends the Cost Curve Down
Comments (1)
Today's Headlines From The Atlantic
technology Pac Rat
The fight to save video games from bit rot
china Cyber Warriors
The battle to protect our infrastructure from hackers
column Prison Porn
"Lockup" is exploitative and debasing
VOICES
Face Of The Day 2.9.10 8:17 P.M.
Shoe, Meet the Other Foot, Part II 2.9.10 5:19 P.M.
Procedure-Propism 2.9.10 4:47 P.M.
Live From Death Row 2.9.10 4:00 P.M.
Tonights aviation-mishap report 2.9.10 8:49 P.M.
The Middle East Comes to Irvine 2.9.10 4:38 P.M.
Liberal condescension 2.9.10 1:48 P.M.
Disney's Great Quarter
Is Banking About Trust?
The Scariest Employment Graph I've Seen This Year
Google Buzz Threatens Facebook, Gets Along with Twitter
Does Scott Brown Spell Change?
Win or lose, does Scott Brown spell change? Insight on CNBC's The Kudlow Report with Mark Tapscott, Washington Examiner and Megan McArdle, The Atlantic Business & Economics Editor....
Multimedia
McArdle v. Noah On Health Care Reform
Video
Megan McArdle on Health Care, Debt and Obama
Video
Larry Summers on the Global Economy
Weekly
Author
- Arnold Kling
- Anal_yst
- Adam Pasick
- Ben Adler
- Bob Cohn
- Benjamin Lockwood
- Ben Bradley
- Bart Wilson
- Conor Clarke
- Clive Crook
- Charles Davi
- Conor Friedersdorf
- Chris Good
- Cyra Master
- Clement Tan
- Daniel Indiviglio
- Derek Lowe
- Dr. Manhattan
- Derek Thompson
- Economics of Contempt
- Eric Werker
- Francis X. McArdle
- Gregory Clark
- Grant McCracken
- Graeme Wood
- Harvey Wallbanger
- James Fallows
- James Gibney
- J.J. Gould
- Joshua Green
- Jim Manzi
- Jenny Merkin
- Justin Miller
- Jeffrey Young
- Kerry Golds
- Marc Ambinder
- Matthew Cooper
- Mindles H. Dreck
- Megan Hupp
- Max Fisher
- Mackie Jimbo
- Menachem Kaiser
- Madeleine Kennedy
- Michael Kinsley
- Megan McArdle
- Matt Miller
- Marion Nestle
- Mike Konczal
- Nicole Allan
- Niraj Chokshi
- Paul Ormerod
- Peter Suderman
- Rob Atkinson
- Ryan Avent
- Ross Douthat
- Richard Florida
- Regina Herzlinger
- Ryan McClafferty
- Richard A. Posner
- Reihan Salam
- Steven Landsburg
- Tyler Cowen
- Virginia Postrel
- William Haseltine
- Nina and Tim Zagat
Monthly
Category
Home |
Atlantic FAQ |
Masthead |
Site Guide |
Subscribe |
Subscriber Help
Atlantic Store |
Educational Program |
Jobs/Internships |
Privacy Policy |
Terms and Conditions |
Feedback |
Advertise
Copyright © 2010 by The Atlantic Monthly Group. All rights reserved.






Am I right then, $829 billion over ten years to cover 29 million people is costing close to $3k per person covered per year.
Oh yeah, that they're going to spend less is amazing. Ain't gonna happen, but it's amazing that I can read it in print.