This isn't exactly correct, there's something of a gap you can fall into.
If you earn very little, you might qualify for Medicaid, which is essentially taxpayer-paid healthcare via the government.
If you earn low amounts, you might qualify for various levels of subsidies on private insurance plans through the state-run health exchanges.
However, there are certainly situations in which you may not qualify for medicaid, and still not earn enough to afford a private plan, even with subsidies. There are definitely people in this situation.
This wasn't unforeseen, it was known it would happen.
The gap is covered in about half the states. The other half don't like Obama so they refused the free money from the feds to cover the gap for their citizens. Can't make this stuff up.
No, the money that was refused did not reduce anyone's taxes, so your statement is false. Obviously, expenditure has to come from somewhere, but when the government operates in a deficit, marginal spending comes from debt, not taxes.
Debt taken out by the government has to be paid by the tax payers in both principal and interest. There is no free money. Not spending additional federal money is a virtue not a problem.
> Debt taken out by the government has to be paid by the tax payers in both principal and interest.
That's not actually true, particularly, there is no necessary reason why, as long as economic growth can be maintained over the long term (even if that's not always the case over shorter terms) a country can't sustainably have an ever-increasing debt balance, without ever paying any of it off other than by issuing new debt.
Even if it was true, if government deficit spending increases stimulate economic expansion, the tax funds to pay for the spending can be produced by the spending.
That's just the kind of thinking that hasn't worked for anyone yet. It didn't work for Rome or anyone since. The collapse always comes when the public coffers are drained.
"if government deficit spending increases stimulate economic expansion"
Which it didn't and hasn't - the best times in our economy were when the government spent and taxed less (e.g. 1946 & 1948 fiscal changes).
"the tax funds to pay for the spending can be produced by the spending"
No, they cannot and that's just twisted logic - you cannot spend your way out of debt
Which company continued to spend money in excess of its revenues and took out debt to compensate then somehow without increasing revenue above spending paid off its debt?
You must have missed how those stimulus packages actually worked or have some view of economics that isn't a reality. Debt has an upper limit and revenue increases mean taxpayers pay it. Stimulus doesn't create any wealth and hasn't worked. There is not one concrete case of what you describe working in history.
If you earn very little, you might qualify for Medicaid, which is essentially taxpayer-paid healthcare via the government.
If you earn low amounts, you might qualify for various levels of subsidies on private insurance plans through the state-run health exchanges.
However, there are certainly situations in which you may not qualify for medicaid, and still not earn enough to afford a private plan, even with subsidies. There are definitely people in this situation.
This wasn't unforeseen, it was known it would happen.