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Obamacare is being implemented, but only the easy things have been done.  But everything the government itself was supposed to do has failed. Everything.

These include:

  • The CLASS Act. This feeble attempt to create long-term care insurance was thrown overboard by the administration itself after it became apparent it would be impossible to do.
  • The 1099 provision. This requirement that businesses issue a 1099 to any vendor from whom they purchased $600 of goods and services in a year was repealed after business owners explained what an impossible burden it would impose.
  • Federal high risk pools.These pools were created and well-funded, but hardly anyone enrolled due to the complexity and cost.
  • Retiree health subsidies.This had the opposite problem. Large corporations and unions were more than happy to accept free money to do what they were doing anyway (provide health benefits to retirees), but all the money ran out in about a third of the time expected.
  • CO-OPs. Once again, Congress put so many restrictions on what was supposed to be a non-profit health plan in each state that none have come into being even though billions were spent.
  • Small employer tax credits. The complexity and confusion of these credits deterred all but a handful of companies from applying.
  • Medical Loss Ratios.The MLR requirements have had the very predictable effect of discouraging innovation and higher-deductible or “mini-med” health plans.
  • Medicaid expansions. The Supreme Court made these expansions voluntary for the states and it currently looks as though fewer than half will do it.
  • Health IT. The HITECH bill was enacted separately from ObamaCare, and many billions have been spent on it, but reports from the field indicate the top-down efforts result in lower quality and less efficiency.
  • Limits on FSA funding. It is cruelly ironic, but the families most disadvantaged by the new $2,500 limit on FSA funding are those with special needs children.
  • Limits on the Medical Expense Deduction. Beginning in 2013, a taxpayer will be able to deduct only those medical expenses that exceed 10% of income, up from the current 7.5%. Once again it is the sickest families that will be hurt.

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