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Tuesday, Aug 9 2016

Full Issue

GOP Policy Experts Begin Etching Health Law 'Grand Bargain' In Case Of Clinton Presidency

They're particularly focused on waivers that would allow states to replace the law's insurance exchange structure with their own models.

With Donald Trump's presidential campaign faltering, Republican health policy experts are gaming out Plan B for working with a Hillary Clinton administration to achieve conservative healthcare goals. Their focus is on a possible 鈥済rand bargain鈥 that would give conservative states greater flexibility to design market-based approaches to make coverage more affordable and reduce spending in exchange for covering low-income workers in non-Medicaid expansion states. (Meyer, 8/6)

In other news, Modern Healthcare fact checks Donald Trump's health law claims聽鈥

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump claimed in an economic speech Monday that his proposal to repeal the Affordable Care Act would 鈥渟ave鈥 2 million American jobs. But there are serious problems with that statement. The Congressional Budget Office tentatively projected in early 2014 that the ACA would reduce the total number of hours Americans work by 1.5% to 2% between 2017 and 2024鈥斺渁lmost entirely because workers will choose to supply less labor鈥攇iven the new taxes and other incentives they will face and the financial benefits some will receive.鈥 (Meyer, 8/8)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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