Black Agenda Report
Black Agenda Report
News, commentary and analysis from the black left.

  • Home
  • Africa
  • African America
  • Education
  • Environment
  • International
  • Media and Culture
  • Political Economy
  • Radio
  • US Politics
  • War and Empire

The Obama Legacy Part 1: Profits for the Monopolies, Healthcare for Those Who Can Afford it
Danny Haiphong, BAR contributor
29 Jun 2016
🖨️ Print Article

by Danny Haiphong

Barack Obama is busy packaging his “legacy” as the First Black President – which is a fact – and as a “progressive” – which is patently false. His supporters tout the Affordable Care Act (ACA) as his crowning achievement. However, “from its very roots, the ACA was destined to consolidate the corporate insurance and pharmaceutical industry's control over US healthcare.”

The Obama Legacy Part 1: Profits for the Monopolies, Healthcare for Those Who Can Afford it

by Danny Haiphong

“The US leads the world in healthcare expenditures and healthcare-induced debt.”

As the Sanders campaign grinds to a halt, it is critical to examine what conditions brought about the crisis of legitimacy that currently afflicts the US political apparatus. The Obama Administration bares much of the blame. In this multi-part series, the most critical crimes of the Obama Administration will be explored. President Obama's two-term reign is rapidly making its way toward the history books. Yet the impact of Obama's policies will endure for years to come.

Healthcare has been a point of discussion in the 2016 elections. Millions of people in the US are angry about the healthcare system, and for good reason. For the last eight years, the narrative around healthcare in Washington has been confined to the terms and conditions of the Affordable Care Act (ACA). The debate has centered on the attacks ACA has received from the Republican Party. ACA is thus a critical piece to the puzzle that is the Obama legacy.

What isn't discussed often enough is how Obama has worked tirelessly to protect and fulfill the interests of the corporate healthcare system. In 2009, he collaborated with the monopoly health insurance industry and its pharmaceutical counterparts to repress the demand for single payer healthcare. The conditions at the time appeared ripe for a single payer system. Popular discontent with Republican Party rule was at its highest point. A relatively organized movement for single payer care was represented by organizations such as Healthcare Now. The Democratic Party possessed a majority in both the House and Senate.

“Obama has worked tirelessly to protect and fulfill the interests of the corporate healthcare system.”

Despite these favorable conditions, Obama proceeded to broker with the corporate healthcare monopoly. The result was a piece of legislation created by the corporate healthcare system itself. The Affordable Care Act was modeled after the Heritage Foundation's model for healthcare reform, first instituted in Massachusetts. One of its key architects, Liz Fowler, wrote the bill as a former VP of WellPoint (now Anthem) before taking a lucrative position with pharmaceutical giant Johnson-Johnson in 2012. From its very roots, the ACA was destined to consolidate the corporate insurance and pharmaceutical industry's control over US healthcare.

Under the law, US citizens are mandated to possess health insurance prior to filing income taxes for a given year. Those who do not have health insurance are forced to pay a hefty fine. Working and unemployed people without employer-sponsored healthcare must choose from a system of government-subsidized corporate health insurance plans. The plans created by ACA vary greatly in coverage. Plans operate on a tiered basis. Platinum plans cover 90 percent of covered services but are the most expensive. Bronze plans are the least expensive, but cover just 60 percent of services rendered. 

Supporters of ACA have attempted to ease the fear of inadequate healthcare coverage under the bill by talking up the Medicaid expansion option as well as the government issued subsidy. But Medicaid expansion has been left to the authority of the states, with 22 states opting out. Government subsidies only cover the Silver plans that have a higher deductable and pay for just 70 percent of covered costs. This leaves the majority of Americans earning less than 30,000 per year to choose the Bronze plan. For millions, neither Medicaid nor the Platinum plan will be an option for coverage. The vast majority of insurance recipients under ACA will thus pay for a large portion of their healthcare costs.

“Government subsidies only cover the Silver plans that have a higher deductable and pay for just 70 percent of covered costs.”

ACA has also placed the existence of employer-sponsored plans under great risk. A 2013 report from UNITE HERE details how the profitability of the exchanges far outweighs the punishment for not providing healthcare to workers. Employers are given the option of paying up to $10,000 per worker for health insurance coverage or suffer a $2,000 fine for every worker that goes uninsured. Furthermore, there is nothing in ACA that prevents employers from cutting hours in order to avoid healthcare costs. According to the study, hundreds of UNITE HERE employers cut benefits as soon as the employer mandate went into effect in 2013. 

Instead of moving to a policy of universal healthcare, the Obama Administration further privatized an already deeply corporate system through the passage of ACA. Millions of Americans will remain uninsured into the year 2019. Millions more continue to struggle to pay the healthcare costs leveled on them by privately owned, publicly distributed health plans. The US leads the world in healthcare expenditures and healthcare-induced debt. The cost of healthcare per person averages to about $9,086, while a quarter of people in the US report suffering from healthcare-related financial woes. 

The only winners from ACA have been the "healthcare" monopolies. More people than ever are now covered under expensive ACA plans, leading to a predictable surge in profits. Many deem ACA the greatest achievement of the Obama Administration. From the vantage point of the health insurance industry, such a claim makes sense. For working and unemployed people, ACA has only guaranteed that more of the burden of healthcare costs falls on them. The struggle for universal coverage has been set back by ACA's passage. Healthcare remains a privilege for those who can afford it. Through all the spin regarding healthcare reform, it is this fact that has made Obama’s masters in the healthcare industry proud.

Danny Haiphong is an Asian activist and political analyst in the Boston area. He can be reached at wakeupriseup1990@gmail.com

Do you need and appreciate Black Agenda Report articles? Please click on the DONATE icon, and help us out, if you can.


More Stories


  • Mumia Abu Jamal
    Black Agenda Radio with Margaret Kimberley
    March for Mumia
    21 Nov 2025
    Beginning on November 28, a March for Mumia Abu Jamal and will begin in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and end on December 9 at S.C.I. Mahanoy prison in Frackville, Pennsylvania, where Mumia is being…
  • Trinidad and Tobago
    Clau O'Brien Moscoso , Erica Caines
    Trinidad and Tobago in the Crosshairs of U.S. Imperialism
    19 Nov 2025
    Sariyah Mohammad of Trinbago for Palestine and David Abdulah of the Movement for Social Justice joined National Co-Coordinator Erica Caines and Haiti/America Team Co-Coordinator Clau O'Brien Moscoso…
  • Margaret Kimberley, BAR Executive Editor and Senior Columnist
    Eric Adams, Zionism, and Pre-Emptive Strikes Against Mamdani
    19 Nov 2025
    Eric Adams, New York City’s blustering and corrupt outgoing mayor, is working with his allies to undermine mayor elect Zohran Mamdani in a blatant power grab and a violation of all norms of democracy.
  • Editors, The Black Agenda Review
    ESSAY: Europe's Other Self, Stuart Hall, 1991
    19 Nov 2025
    “The story of European identity is often told as if it had no exterior.”
  • Ann Garrison, BAR Contributing Editor
    Somalia: Farmaajo Returns
    19 Nov 2025
    Farmaajo, a hugely popular Somali politician who has never been favored by the US, is widely expected to seek the presidency in Somalia’s 2026 election.
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us