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						 Government 
						costs could rise $2.3 billion without Obamacare 
						payments: study 
			
   
            
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		[April 25, 2017] WASHINGTON 
		(Reuters) - The U.S. government's costs could increase by $2.3 billion 
		in 2018 if Congress and President Donald Trump decide not to fund 
		Obamacare-related payments to health insurers, according to a study 
		released Tuesday by the Kaiser Family Foundation. 
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			 The payments amount to about $7 billion in fiscal year 2017 and help 
			cover out-of-pocket medical costs for low-income Americans who 
			purchase insurance on the individual insurance exchanges created by 
			the Affordable Care Act, often called Obamacare. 
			 
			Trump has threatened to withhold the payments to force Democrats to 
			the negotiating table on a healthcare bill to replace Obamacare. 
			 
			He has also said he will fund the subsidies if Democrats agree to 
			funding for his proposed border wall with Mexico as part of efforts 
			to pass a government funding bill this week and avert a shutdown. 
			Democrats have rejected the conditional offer. 
			
			  
			  
			If no deal is made, parts of the federal government will shut down 
			at 12:01 am on Saturday. 
			 
			The payments are the subject of a pending Republican lawsuit that 
			was appealed by the Obama administration and put on hold when Trump 
			took office. 
			 
			The government could save $10 billion by revoking the payments, 
			Kaiser said. But insurers that remain in the market would have to 
			hike premiums nearly 20 percent to cover their losses, Kaiser found, 
			so the government would have to spend $12.3 billion on tax credits 
			to help pay for Americans' premium costs - a net increase of 23 
			percent on federal spending on marketplace subsidies. 
			
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			The projection assumes that insurers remain in the marketplace next 
			year. Health policy experts have said without the payments, many 
			insurers could not afford to stay in the market and will likely 
			exit, which would leave some U.S. counties without an insurer. 
			 
			Aetna , UnitedHealth Group Inc and Humana  have already exited 
			most state exchanges for 2017 and said they will do so next year as 
			well. 
			 
			(Reporting By Yasmeen Abutaleb; Edited by Caroline Humer and Mary 
			Milliken) 
			[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
				reserved.] Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, 
			broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. 
			
			
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