The people who crafted the Republican ObamaCare reform bill seem to want to help. They promise other reforms will be coming. Trust us, they say, we’re from the (new) government, and we’re here to help.
![Why the Republican version of ObamaCare is a sham](https://www.goodmaninstitute.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/ryanpaul_healthcare.webp)
The people who crafted the Republican ObamaCare reform bill seem to want to help. They promise other reforms will be coming. Trust us, they say, we’re from the (new) government, and we’re here to help.
Just repealing Obamacare would get rid of the anti-middle class individual mandate, the anti-jobs employer mandate, and all the other federal regulations that have caused health insurance premiums to soar.
American Commitment President Phil Kerpen, Independent Institute Senior Fellows John Goodman and John Hart, and former Senior Aide to Senator Coburn on why the American Health Care Act vote was canceled.
Last Saturday, North Korea test fired yet another long range ballistic missile this time from a far more dangerous mobile platform.
As I’ve written, the House Republican tax bill has a lot to recommend it, including to Democrats. It needs some tweaks and proper transition rules to ensure it’s at least revenue neutral and as progressive as the current system (which, as you can read here, is far more progressive than commonly believed).
John C. Goodman on Health Savings Accounts John C. Goodman talked about health savings accounts and the expectation that they will be expanded under any Republican plan to overhaul the Affordable Care Act.
Fox News interviewed The Goodman Institute’s President and Founder John C. Goodman about the next steps on Obamacare reform.
After 40 years of writing financial opinion pieces for the Dallas Morning News, Scott Burns has retired. Larry Kotlikoff will replace Burns in the weekly column, providing his insight into taxes, Social Security and Medicare.
The provision was buried deep in a 1,000-page bill that Congress passed in December by large bipartisan majorities. Most lawmakers probably didn’t know it was there.
Do you think it is a bit strange that after 7 years, Republicans in Congress still don’t have a replacement plan for Obamacare? Or that they now tell us that developing one will take 3 or 4 more years.