In order to maintain their revenue-neutral status, six years from now ObamaCare will have to be suspended for four years to allow tax revenues to catch up again.
If you read the article, that is thoroughly debunked. The revenue is never going to catch up. And Obama and the politicians are delaying or stopping revenue raising measures that are politically painful, e.g., delaying the cuts to Medicare Advantage.
Medicare costs more than nine times the original estimates. Obamacare is another entitlement program that will just add to the bankruptcy of this country like Medicare, SS, and Medicaid. We can't afford them.
Obamacare was never revenue neutral.
CLASS: The ACAs CLASS long-term care provisions were originally projected to generate $37 billion in net premiums through 2015 ($86 billion over ten years). CLASS was later suspended due to its long-term financial unworkability, meaning these revenues have not materialized and will not.
Employer/individual mandate penalties: These were supposed to have brought in $12 billion through 2015, $101 billion over the first ten years. Because the Obama Administration has repeatedly delayed their enforcement, to date they havent brought in much of anything. Some ACA advocates are even beginning to downplay the significance of possibly ditching these mandates altogether, though they were central to the laws financing scheme.
Medicare Advantage: The ACA was supposed to be financed in part by cuts to Medicare Advantage (MA) totaling $31 billion through FY2015, $128 billion over the first ten years. The White House recently announced that planned MA cuts will not go into effect after all.
Other controversial provisions: The ACAs most controversial savings provisions among them its ambitious Medicare provider payment reductions, the tax on so-called Cadillac health plans, and cost-saving decisions of the Independent Payment Advisory Board have yet to be tested. Given that less-controversial provisions have failed to meet their savings targets, there is little basis for confidence that these more controversial ones will do so.