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Licking their chops: Capitol hill is drooling over the possibility of exchanging health care for more military spending

Licking their chops: Capitol hill is drooling over the possibility of exchanging health care for more military spending

by digby

I’ve heard some cynical takes on the health care bill (including this depressing NY Times article about the newly revealed details of the White House deal with Pharma) but I have to say this really takes it to a new level:

Congress could stumble into a big pile of cash from an unlikely source: the Supreme Court.

The justices will deliver their landmark ruling on the 2010 health care law this month, and the government is in line to reap hundreds of billions of dollars in savings — perhaps more than $1 trillion — if certain parts of it are struck down.

That money could be freed up just in time for a battle over whether automatic cuts to the Pentagon and social programs will kick in, and some members of Congress are already dreaming about the possibilities.

“We’re thinking [about] different options, but there are so many variations of what could happen from the court decision, it’s hard to make any hard plans,” said House Appropriations Committee Chairman Hal Rogers (R-Ky.). But, he added, a windfall “would be a factor” in discussions about whether to keep in place pending Pentagon cuts.

How much money would they have to spend on killer drones and missile defense? A lot.

The Congressional Budget Office estimates that eliminating the law’s individual mandate would save $282 billion over 10 years, a figure based on 16 million fewer people signing up for health care through Medicaid, new health exchanges and private insurance.

Bill Hoagland, a vice president at the insurance company Cigna and the former top Senate Republican budget aide, says that number would jump to more than $500 billion through 2022 if the mandate and related insurance market reforms, such as the requirement that insurers provide coverage for people with pre-existing conditions, are struck down. And there’s even more money at stake in the law’s expansion of Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program, which the court reviewed alongside the individual mandate, during oral arguments in March.

If the court throws them all out but keeps revenues in place, the savings could eclipse $1 trillion

And wouldn’t that be fabulous. What a nice simple way to pay for our obscene defense spending: tax people more for health care and give them less! And if they can keep those lazy poor kids and sick people from having health care too we’ll be good to go. Sheer genius.

No one knows what the court will do — it could uphold the law, strike down parts of it or knock down the whole damn thing. If the law is upheld, the budget picture doesn’t change. If it’s struck down in its entirety, deficit projections would most likely go up by $100 billion to $150 billion over 10 years. But it’s the prospect of a partial strike-down that has some folks on Capitol Hill licking their chops…

With respect to how this affects the budget discussions at the end of the year, I think people will take a little bit of a wait and see,” said Maryland Rep. Chris Van Hollen, the top Democrat on the House Budget Committee.

But many wonks have their eyes on the money.

During oral arguments in March, the justices focused in large part on whether the mandate is unconstitutional. The mandate would force consumers to buy insurance or pay a penalty, and it is among the cost drivers for the government. CBO’s estimate of a $282 billion savings from killing the mandate includes $149 billion less in Medicaid costs for the government, $69 billion less in subsidies for Americans who purchase health care through exchanges created by the law and $80 billion in new tax revenue because fewer companies would offer health plans to their employees.

Jon Gruber, the MIT professor who helped devise Mitt Romney’s Massachusetts health care law and then the federal version, said, “It’s just penny-wise and pound foolish” to eliminate the mandate. “You’re basically saving a little to hurt a lot. You spend three quarters as much to cover half as many people.”

In addition, most experts agree that striking down the mandate but leaving in place insurance industry reforms — like requiring plans to cover people with pre-existing conditions and letting 20-somethings stay on their parents’ insurance — would have disastrous consequences for consumers. The logic: Costs would go up for insurance companies, and the bill would be passed on to consumers.

The court also looked at the constitutionality of the law’s expansion of Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program, which account for $936 billion in government spending through 2022, according to CBO’s latest projections. Some of that overlaps with the money calculated as stemming from the mandate. If both the mandate and the Medicaid and CHIP expansions are struck down, only the provisions designed to pay for the cost of the program remain in effect.

“You really just have a shell of a program on the spending side at that point,” said Jim Capretta, a fellow at the conservative Ethics and Public Policy Center who was an associate director of the White House’s Office of Management and Budget during President George W. Bush’s first term.

Fantastico!

Still, I’m not sure they wouldn’t honestly prefer the whole bill to go down. That would make the projected deficit go way up — and possibly allow for a budgetary bloodbath in the fall the likes of which we haven’t contemplated up to now. And the Dems, as is their wont, would be shellshocked and walk right behind them over the cliff. After all, they could blame the Supreme Court and still be deficit hawks. That’s what they call a real win-win …

But short of that, this is an excellent outcome for the faux deficit mongers. And you have to admit that using health care money to kill people is diabolically brilliant.

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