Swing To Trade
  • Stock
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sports
Politics

WH study warns 9 million Americans could lose health insurance in ‘major’ recession if Trump budget bill fails

by admin May 18, 2025
May 18, 2025

The White House on Saturday released a study estimating that 8.2 to 9.2 million more Americans could be without health insurance as a result of an ensuing recession if President Donald Trump’s ‘big, beautiful bill’ on the budget does not pass. 

The finding comes from a White House Council of Economic Advisers memo titled, ‘Health Insurance Opportunity Cost if 2025 Proposed Budget Reconciliation Bill Does Not Pass.’ 

The research assumes that the U.S. had approximately 27 million uninsured people in 2025. If the budget bill does not pass, that could increase to approximately 36 million uninsured people, far closer to the approximately 50 million people who were uninsured before the implementation of the Affordable Care Act (ACA), also known as Obamacare, in 2010, according to the memo.

The memo says the estimate is ‘based on the assumption that states which expanded Medicaid with relatively generous eligibility will pull back to meet balanced budget requirements and try to provide more unemployment support during a severe recession.’ It also qualifies its conclusions by saying the analysis assumes ‘no policy countermeasures,’ which the White House describes as a ‘very unlikely but plausible worse case’ scenario. 

The White House projects that the expiration of the 2017 Trump tax cuts in 2026 and other shocks would trigger a ‘moderate to severe recession.’ The economic advisers report that a ‘major recession’ would result in reduced consumer spending as a result of higher individual taxes, lower small business investment and hiring as a result higher pass-through individual taxes, global confidence shock including concerns about U.S. competitiveness, and dollar deflation tightening credit and pushing real interest rates higher. 

According to the advisers’ ‘upper bound’ estimate of the impact of not extending the Trump tax cuts, U.S. GDP could contract by approximately 4% over two years – similar to the 2008 recession. Unemployment could increase by four percentage points, resulting in approximately 6.5 million job losses. Of those 6.5 million job losses, 60% had employer-sponsored insurance, so the White House projects approximately 3.9 million people would lose coverage and become uninsured as a result. 

The memo also anticipates a loss of individual and marketplace coverage, as those already without employer-sponsored insurance are no longer able to afford to purchase insurance themselves. The White House expects a 15% drop from approximately 22 million enrolled in 2026 to approximately 3.3 million losing coverage. 

Without the passage of the ‘big, beautiful bill,’ Medicaid and ACA subsidized plan enrollment could experience 10% enrollment frictions, resulting in approximately 500,000 to 1 million people losing or failing to gain coverage, the memo states. The expiration of the 2017 Trump tax cuts would disproportionately affect non-citizens, gig workers and early retirees, according to the White House. The advisers assess that individuals in those working classes without employer-sponsored insurance would no longer be able to afford coverage as a result of a recession, leading to 500,000 to 1 million insurance losses among ‘vulnerable segments.’

House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., is laboring to get the ‘One Big Beautiful Act’ through the House by a self-imposed Memorial Day deadline despite divisions among Republicans, who maintain control of the lower chamber by a razor-thin margin. 

The 1,116-page bill includes more than $5 trillion in tax cuts, costs that are partially offset by spending cuts elsewhere and other changes in the tax code, and would make permanent the tax cuts from Trump’s first term. 

It also realizes many of Trump‘s campaign promises, including temporarily ending taxes on overtime and tips for many workers, creating a new $10,000 tax break on auto loan interest for American-made cars, and even creating a new tax-free ‘MAGA account’ that would contribute $1,000 to children born in his second term.

The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

previous post
DAVID MARCUS: Old Man Biden’s autopen pardons should be null and void
next post
College softball games today: Final day of NCAA regional games

Related Posts

‘Squad’ member wears ‘F— ICE’ pin on House...

February 25, 2026

5 Supreme Court justices skip Trump State of...

February 25, 2026

Jasmine Crockett trashes Trump, boycotts his speech: ‘The...

February 25, 2026

MIKE DAVIS: Kash Patel is restoring the FBI...

February 25, 2026

Speechwriters split after Trump’s record-breaking SOTU: ‘Living in...

February 25, 2026

Where Trump stands in the eyes of Americans...

February 24, 2026

State Dept slammed with hundreds of calls from...

February 24, 2026

New study proposes major shift in US-Israel strategic...

February 24, 2026

Federal court refuses to block new Utah congressional...

February 24, 2026

To go or not to go? Supreme Court...

February 24, 2026
Join The Exclusive Subscription Today And Get Premium Articles For Free

    Your information is secure and your privacy is protected. By opting in you agree to receive emails from us. Remember that you can opt-out any time, we hate spam too!

    Recent Posts

    • UCLA vs. USC winners and losers: March madness bubble teams duel

      February 25, 2026
    • Seahawks GM ‘catching up’ after Super Bowl, clears air on Kenneth Walker

      February 25, 2026
    • Ole Miss still in top 16 seed hunt in women’s basketball bracketology

      February 25, 2026
    • MLB players geeked about Olympics baseball in LA 2028

      February 25, 2026
    • What Trump said about US men’s hockey team at State of the Union

      February 25, 2026
    • About us
    • Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions

    Copyright © 2026 SwingToTrade.com All Rights Reserved.

    Swing To Trade
    • Stock
    • Politics
    • Business
    • Sports