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- Report
CBO examines four policy approaches that could achieve near-universal health insurance coverage.
- Report
In 2019, about 12 percent of people under 65 were not enrolled in a health insurance plan or a government program that provides financial protection from major medical risks. In this report, CBO describes that uninsured population.
- Report
CBO and JCT project that federal subsidies, taxes, and penalties associated with health insurance coverage for people under age 65 will result in a net subsidy from the federal government of $920 billion in 2021 and $1.4 trillion in 2030.
- Report
CBO responds to a request that it reexamine its estimates of short-term, limited-duration insurance.
- Report
CBO presents its projections of what federal deficits, debt, spending, and revenues would be for the next 30 years if current laws governing taxes and spending generally did not change.
- Blog Post
The report will contain CBO’s latest baseline budget projections, which will be based on the economic projections that the agency released in July and will incorporate legislation enacted through August 4.
- Presentation
CBO uses HISIM2 to model firms’ decisions to offer health insurance and households’ decisions to enroll in health insurance. This slide deck describes the analytical methods used in HISIM2 to model firms’ decisions in CBO’s most recent baseline budget projections.
- Report
In CBO’s projections of the outlook under current law, deficits remain large by historical standards, federal debt grows to 98 percent of GDP by 2030, and the economy expands at an average annual rate of 1.7 percent from 2021 to 2030.