The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (commonly referred to as ObamaCare or PPACA), which was signed into US law in 2010, generated a lot of noise from both supporters and detractors. This book argues that the changes introduced by ObamaCare were, in the long history of government intervention in the US health system, generally not as new or novel as claimed.
The scope of the changes introduced by ObamaCare is very wide and covers, among others: the health insurance industry, pharmaceuticals, employers, employees, or the uninsured. The structure of the book shows the individual causes, key assumptions, and impacts of the reform on individual elements or areas of the US health system. One of the most important aspects of the work is analysis of the phenomenon of the so-called 'death spiral'. The changes introduced by ObamaCare reform make it possible to investigate the causes of this phenomenon on a country-wide scale and enable a broader analysis of its effects.
The book will be of great interest to readers in the economics, management and policy of health and health care.
The scope of the changes introduced by ObamaCare is very wide and covers, among others: the health insurance industry, pharmaceuticals, employers, employees, or the uninsured. The structure of the book shows the individual causes, key assumptions, and impacts of the reform on individual elements or areas of the US health system. One of the most important aspects of the work is analysis of the phenomenon of the so-called 'death spiral'. The changes introduced by ObamaCare reform make it possible to investigate the causes of this phenomenon on a country-wide scale and enable a broader analysis of its effects.
The book will be of great interest to readers in the economics, management and policy of health and health care.
Lukasz Jasinski's The Economics of ObamaCare offers critical insights into the PPACA to suggest why this latest effort to reform the US healthcare market failed to offer promised results. His analysis adds an essential contribution to understanding the economics of health reform.
Dr. Roberta Herzberg, Distinguished Senior Fellow, Mercatus Center at George Mason University
Few Europeans understand how American healthcare works, and the same applies to Americans when it comes to Europe. Yet politicians across both sides of the Atlantic paint the other system as the socialist ideal or a capitalist boogeyman, neither of which are true. Yes, things are complicated, but Lukasz's book is a read for anyone trying to understand the American system.
Zilvinas Silenas, President, Foundation for Economic Education
Dr. Roberta Herzberg, Distinguished Senior Fellow, Mercatus Center at George Mason University
Few Europeans understand how American healthcare works, and the same applies to Americans when it comes to Europe. Yet politicians across both sides of the Atlantic paint the other system as the socialist ideal or a capitalist boogeyman, neither of which are true. Yes, things are complicated, but Lukasz's book is a read for anyone trying to understand the American system.
Zilvinas Silenas, President, Foundation for Economic Education