The Affordable Care Act (ACA) represents one of the largest expansions of health insurance coverage to take place in the United States. In 2014, roughly eight million people purchased coverage through a government-run Marketplace. For many of these individuals, a significant feature of the ACA ...
A key feature of the Affordable Care Act (also known as Obamacare) is the way in which responsibility for affordable health care coverage is shared between stakeholders. Companies that employ 50 or more people may be considered "applicable large employers" or ALEs under the Affordable Car...
The Affordable Care Act, colloquially known as Obamacare, gives people a chance to buy health insurance on an open marketplace. People can get ACA-compliant coverage on the Health Insurance Marketplace if they are not insured through their employer, the government, or a similar source. ...
The Affordable Care Act brought changes to the healthcare industry as well as 21 new tax provisions. Some of these provisions were suspended or repealed through legislation, including the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, the Further Consolidated Appropriations Act, and the CARES Act. Certain provisions a...
Updated for Tax Year 2019 • November 8, 2023 3:49 PMOVERVIEWWhat is the Affordable Care Act tax penalty? Under the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare), if you can get health insurance and choose not to, and you aren't exempt for other reasons, you may have to pay a ta...
The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) is a comprehensive healthcare reform law, enacted in 2010. This law has 3 main goals in mind: Make affordable health insurance more accessible to a larger population. This law provides consumers with subsidies, or “premium tax credits” that...
The Affordable Care Act (ACA) and other major health care legislative acts have had an important impact on the care of heart failure patients in the United States. The main effects of the ACA include regulation of the health insurance industry, expansion of access to health care, and health ...
Introduction Beginning in 2014, the Affordable Care Act (ACA) state-level Medicaid expansions have been associated with substantial reductions in the uninsured population.1 As of 2018, among individuals with low income, the proportion without health insurance was nearly double in nonexpansion states (...
These increases placed a financial burden on households—particularly Black and low-income families. Exhibit 7 Rental markets have experienced similar pressures. Areas such as Dallas County, Texas, and Fulton County, Georgia, saw rent increases of more than 5 percent annually between 201...
Anastasia MillerProgram Director, Healthcare Leadership B.S., University of Louisville Geoffrey HillCEO & Principal Advisor at Raisonné & Hammer Price Corporation Matt HyllandFinancial Planner at Arnold & Mote Wealth Management Amit SinhaProfessor of Finance and Quantitative Methods at Bradley University...