Oral Presentation: The Individual Mandate and Young People
One of the reasons that the 'individual mandate' was such a critical component of the Affordable Care Act -- the mandate requiring all Americans to have health insurance -- was that it was designed to encourage younger, healthier people to sign up for insurance rather than pay a penalty. It was deemed essential to have healthier people with fewer health complaints in the insurance 'risk pool' to ensure that healthcare costs in America did not spiral out of control. This paper will examine this specific aspect of healthcare reform and to attempt to understand firstly if this is true (if increasing the number of young people signing up for healthcare will reduce costs overall) and how the government has attempted to encourage young people to sign up for such insurance.
Young people are thought to be "a group avidly sought by insurers because they are usually healthier and need fewer costly medical services" (Pear 2014). However, they are also often called 'young invincibles' because many believe they simply do not need health insurance because they are healthy. Ultimately, many cost the system more in the long run when they do fall ill. Today "almost 13 million of them account for more than 27% of non-elderly uninsured persons in the United States, and close to half of uninsured young people have a hard time paying medical bills. Each year, young adults account for nearly a quarter of the 129 million...
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