House Republicans' proposal to revise the Affordable Care Act in the US would lower the number of Americans with health insurance by 24 million while reducing the federal deficit by US$337 billion by 2026, congressional budget analysts said.
The report from the Congressional Budget Office underscores the dramatic loss in health insurance coverage that would take place if the GOP healthcare plan is enacted, potentially contradicting President Donald Trump's vow that the plan would provide "insurance for everybody" and threatening support from moderate Republican lawmakers.
Fourteen million people would lose health coverage next year alone, the report stated.
Premiums would be 15 to 20 per cent higher in the first year compared to the ACA, and 10 per cent lower on average after 2026.
Proponents of the plan, led by House Speaker Paul Ryan have argued that the total number of people covered is the wrong way to measure the law's impact.