I am coming to realize (well, fully realize) that I have very little feel for the scale of the ACA. I was stunned when an article about Kentucky had twice as many new Medicare sign-ups as new non-Medicaid policy sign-ups, but I thought maybe that would change, and then the national numbers in the article I cited showed this ratio still holding. But the total numbers are still small, where small means in terms of expected final totals. So I suggest some letters to represent numbers that are not yet known.
x= the number of people who will have signed up for non-Medicaid policies by December 23.
y=the number of people who will have signed up for non-Medicaid policies after December 23but before the end of March.
z=the number of people who are legally required to sign up for non-Medicaid policies before the end of March but don't do so.
m=.the number of people who sign up for Medicaid by the end of March.
My reason for distinguishing between x and y is that it seems the former represents people who are enthusiastic about the ACA. December 23 is (I think) the deadline for getting a policy on January 1. Those who sign up later are more likely to be doing so because it is required, rather than because they are eager.
The relevant values at the time of the NYT article I cited,
http://www.nytimes.c...dayspaper&_r=1 , are
x=243,000 and m=567,000. Of course y and z are not yet meaningful.
Correction: According to MedPage at
http://www.medpageto...ch/Reform/43359, the correct value for x at the end of November is x=364,682 . The smaller number was just for November. I don't think this corrected number leads me to any change in outlook. They also assert "Also, more than 803,000 people have been determined to be eligible for Medicaid, HHS said Monday.". That's a little vague. I suppose if they have been determined to be eligible they have signed up, but it doesn't say that.
If I understand it correctly, the Obama administration expects x+y to be about 7 million at the end of March. The cited MedPage article gives this figure, and I have seen it elsewhere. I don't know the administration's estimate for the eventual value of m, but I suppose that they have one. This all makes 364,682 a small number compared to 7 million, and so it is difficult to draw any reliable conclusions. I suppose that the current situation of having about 2 Medicais for every non-Medicaid policy is an anomaly and will change as the numbers get larger.
One thing that I get from the MedPage article is that others, more informed than I, are also wary of drawing conclusions.
I suppose that the CBO has estimates and predictions of all these numbers, and estimates of how they will break into more refined categories.
There is a story today about how it is going in Maryland
Quote
As of last Saturday, about 5,200 people had enrolled in private plans through the state-run exchange. O’Malley said he remains committed to a goal of signing up 260,000 people by the end of March — 150,000 in private plans and the rest in Medicaid.
Part of my interest is the Maryland estimate of 150,000 in private plans and 260,000-150,000=110,000 in Medicaid. So Maryland is expecting about 42% of the sign-ups to be Medicaid when all is done. This seems more reasonable than the 70% that appears to be the current national figure.
From what I have read, the Maryland health website makes the federal one look good by comparison. See
http://www.washingto...ry.html?hpid=z3
The guy with the responsibility for running it is the frontrunner to be next year's Democratic nominee for governor. Dems may want to re-think this choice.