Want this question answered?
no
yes
Yes, in 2010.
is
As "ObamaCare" is not some plan or policy you buy, but a legal framework for regulation of the healthcare insurance system, you don't "buy" ObamaCare. You get coverage the way you normally would: either from an existing government program, or purchased from a health insurance carrier. You pay as normal.
One of the dumbest and most irrelevant questions i've seen in a very long time. and way to show your predisposition by calling it Obamacare. It is actually, almost verbatim, a Heritage Foundation (conservative) authored plan anyway. call it Heritage care. One person opinion is OK to express. This plan has 2000 pages. Mr. Obama said he didn't mind it called Obamacare.
Yes. Under the Affordable Care Act (called "ObamaCare" by some), if you have a child, whether in college or not, that child can stay on your health insurance plan until age 26.
Not Applicable means not accesable - meaning that the number or figure that is 'not applicable' is not known and cannot be found.
ObamaCare may cause Blue Cross to merge with Blue Shield. Although the two have dodged merging with other insurance companies in the past, the two may now merge in order to compete with the new healthcare plan.
Its so hard to get this question answered. Does Disability from Social Security count towards earned income or unearned income when trying to figure out how much credit we would get towards the Obamacare health plan
nothing
ObamaCare (or, more properly, the PPACA) is not a insurance coverage plan. It is a legal regulatory framework concerned with making substantial changes to both the government-sponsored health plans (Medicare/Medicaid) and the private insurance plan market. Thus, you can't "buy Obamacare". In terms of the economic impact of the law, that's a complete unknown at this point. The law and changes are complex and far-reaching, and we won't have even a basic sense of the economic result until 2018 at the very earliest.