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Healthcare Industry News > Clinton vs. Obama on Health Care Clinton vs. Obama on Health Care During the Democratic debate on November 15th, front running candidates for the presidential nomination Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton and Senator Barack Obama clashed over how to bring health care to more of the country’s growing number of uninsured. Clinton’s plan includes a mandate forcing everyone to purchase health insurance. Subsidies would be available to make those purchases more affordable. The rationale is that pooling both healthy and high risk Americans together will make medical insurance costs more cost-effective. Plus, mandates alleviate the concern that some middle-class individuals would simply refuse to sign up for health coverage. Candidate John Edwards’ plan also calls for mandates. Obama argues that people want to have health insurance, but cost is standing in their way. Therefore, mandates would do little to correct the problem. Instead, he would require coverage for children and would either force employers to provide coverage to their workers or to establish a new program to provide coverage to the uninsured. The cost estimates for the proposed plans also vary. Both Clinton’s and Edward’s plans would cost around $110 billion a year. Obama’s would cost up to $65 billion. The new programs would be funded in part by rolling back some of President Bush’s tax cuts. Read Original Story at www.nytimes.com |
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