ADVERTISEMENT

AEI recommends converting Medicare to a premium-support system and block-granting Medicaid, both strategies that have been proposed by House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan Paul Davis RyanBiden's debate game plan? Keep cool and win Trump, Biden have one debate goal: Don't lose RNC chair on election: We are on track to win the White House MORE (R-Wis.).





"A safe, effective and sustainable cure for the after-effects of ObamaCare must deal with a number of key issues," the report states. "They boil down to providing better incentives and information resources to help us live within our financial means while improving our health.

"Well-functioning markets and private choices can handle these tasks effectively and nimbly," the report continues.



The report assumes that efforts to fully repeal the healthcare law will be viable after Obama leaves office in four years.



Study author Thomas Miller argues that the massive task of implementing the law could prove too much for health officials.



He also points to public opinion polls that reveal antipathy toward some of the law's provisions, laying the groundwork for another repeal campaign.



"Support for either partial or full repeal and replacement of portions of the ACA remained strong as of early November 2012," Miller writes, citing exit polls. "Twenty-four percent of voters wanted to repeal some of the law and 25 percent wanted to repeal all of it (a combined near-majority of 49 percent), whereas 26 percent of voters wanted the law expanded and 18 percent wanted it left as is."



The political right has opposed healthcare reform since it passed in 2010.

Opponents of the law hoped that a number of moves — House-backed bills, the Supreme Court's decision, the November elections — would thwart the law, but those hopes were largely dashed when President Obama retook the White House.



Read the report here.