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What Happens If Trump Repeals Obamacare?

- Joe Raedle—Getty Images
Joe Raedle—Getty Images

President-elect Donald Trump has pledged to repeal the Affordable Care Act when elected, calling it a "total disaster." With Republicans -- who have vowed for six years to overturn President Barack Obama's health care law -- set to control both the Senate and the House of Representatives in addition to the presidency, a dismantling of Obamacare is more likely than ever. Here's what repealing the law would mean for you.

Republicans do not hold 60 seats in the Senate, so a full repeal is unlikely, according to the New York Times. But according to PricewaterhouseCoopers, Trump and Congress could make "targeted changes" to the law, including defunding "the consumer exchange subsidies in a budgetary maneuver known as reconciliation."

 

These are the targeted changes: In January, the GOP passed a bill (that Obama vetoed) that eliminated the subsidies that help many Obamacare recipients afford their health coverage as well as Medicaid expansion that gave coverage to more than 6 million low- and moderate-income Americans. The bill also eliminated the employer mandate; the individual mandate, which requires everyone to have health insurance or pay a tax penalty; and restricts funding to organizations like Planned Parenthood.

Read Next: What Women Should Know About Health Care Under Trump

According to Amy Lotven, a reporter and editor for Inside Health Policy/Inside Health Reform, it is possible that the elimination of subsidies could cause millions of people to lose their insurance overnight. A clause in the agreement between insurers and the government allows insurers to bow out of policies if subsidies end.

However, given that Vice President-elect Mike Pence said there would be a transition period—which the GOP plan put at two years—that is not necessarily likely. Additionally, "the clause also says 'subject to state law,' so [it is] unclear how that would pan out on the ground level," Lotven writes in an email.

The Times reports that the reconciliation noted above would not impact some of the most popular provisions of Obamacare, including allowing people under the age of 26 to stay on their parents' health insurance and the requirement that health insurers cannot refuse coverage to those with pre-existing conditions.

In Japan, traders working a foreign exchange desk watch U.S. election results. The Nikkei index fell more than 900 points as Trump's win became real. Toru Hanai—Reuters
The Philippine Stock exchange fell to a 7-month low on Trump’s win. In this photo, a Filipino trader looks at the electronic board showing a downward trend during trading at the Philippine Stock Exchange at the financial district of Makati, south of Manila, Philippines, Wednesday, Nov. 9, 2016. Aaron Favila—AP
Pedestrians look at an electronic stock board displaying the Nikkei Stock Average outside a securities firm in Tokyo on Nov. 9, 2016. The yen strengthened against the U.S. dollar, which will make it more difficult for Japan to fight off its ongoing inflation problem. Tomohiro Ohsumi—Bloomberg via Getty Images
As news that Clinton lost major battleground states was confirmed, billions were wiped from Australian Securities Exchange, as it was described as "a sea of red." David Gray—Reuters
One of Trump's biggest campaign promises has been to crack down on the Chinese government, who Trump says weakens the value of China's renminbi, giving it an unfair advantage in world trade. The Chinese currency rallied as the U.S. dollar's value fell following Trump's win. Wang Zhao—AFP/Getty Images
Asian markets were up and running during the wee hours of the morning in the U.S., when Trump's gain on electoral college votes surpassed Clinton's. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index fell to 2.6%. Isaac Lawrence—AFP/Getty Images
Gulf State markets -- such as the Qatar Stock Exchange being monitored by a trader shown here -- fell after news of the Trump victory. These markets are heavily exposed to changes in the oil market, and Trump has promised to make America an even bigger fuel and oil producer. Naseem—Reuters
A trader watches Trump on TV as Dubai’s stock market falls. The one upside for traders there? The U.S. doesn't do much trade with countries like Dubai, so Trump's protectionist trade policies may not impact them directly. Ashraf Mohammad Mohammad Alam—Reuters
In Germany, the DAX exchange fell 3% after trading began, following news of Trump's victory. Michael Probst—AP
Traders on the floor at ETX Capital in London watched as Trump was elected. The UK markets suffered huge losses in June, after their own surprise Brexit referendum results sent stocks into a tailspin. Chris Ratcliffe—Bloomberg via Getty Images
A man looks at a screen displaying news of markets update inside the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) building in Mumbai, India, November 9, 2016. Danish Siddiqui—Reuters

During the two year transition period stipulated by the GOP bill, Trump and the GOP would theoretically implement whatever new policy they come up with. "Practically, you can’t turn everything off immediately," Chris Condeluci, a healthcare expert who worked with Senate Republicans, told Vox's Sarah Kliff. "The GOP doesn’t want to get beat up over kicking 20 million people off of insurance."

The issue is that there may not be a replacement plan ready if it is repealed right away by the Trump Administration, as Republican law makers are already promising.

Read Next: Obamacare Really Isn’t the Job Killer Trump Says It Is

So what would Trump do about rising health care costs? He has proposed expanding tax-free health savings accounts, selling insurance across state lines, block-granting Medicaid, and giving tax credits to people to help affordability, among other things.

But by repealing Obamacare, and the subsidies that come with it, Trump's current plan would increase costs for consumers who buy insurance individually.

"A recent study by the Commonwealth Fund and Rand Corp. finds that without repeal, an individual ACA policy would cost you $3,200 a year on average in 2018, but repeal would pump up the cost of a replacement policy to $4,700," Money reported. Commonwealth also found that repealing the law would increase the deficit in the long-run.

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