by Jeremy Leaming
A Washington Post front-page headline declares that the Affordable Care Act “will add $340 billion to deficit, new study finds.” It’s an eye-catching title, especially in light of the Congressional Budget Office’s assessment that the law would lead to a decline in the deficit.
Jonathan Chait writing for Daily Intel says The Post’s article is hardly the blockbuster story it is dressed up to be.
For starters there is no such study. Instead, Chait points out that The Post is actually talking about a partisan paper “published by the Mercatus Center, a Koch-funded organization that produces some quality work as well as a fair amount of schlock that does not meet the standards of your typical university economics paper. This paper is an example of the latter.”
The paper, by Charles Blahous, a research fellow at the Koch-funded organization and former Bush administration official, relies, Chait writes, on a simplistic conceptual trick producing a “bizarre assumption” that the new health care form law can only add to the deficit because of new spending.
The White House has also weighed in on The Post’s coverage of the Blahous paper. Writing for The White House Blog, Jeanne Lambrew blasts the paper for promoting a false claim, and cites the work of the CBO and the Office of Management and Budget, which projects “lower Federal budget deficits as a result of the law.”

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rcuit supported a lower district court’s opinion that found constitutional the law’s minimum coverage provision, which requires individuals, starting in 2014, to maintain health care coverage, or pay a penalty, called a “shared responsibility payment.” Specifically the district court held that the minimum coverage provision was a legitimate regulation of economic activity pursuant to the Commerce Clause and the Necessary and Proper Clause.