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Spending $716 Billion, Twice (Time for honesty about Medicare)
National Review ^ | 08/17/2012 | Grace-Marie Turner

Posted on 08/17/2012 6:42:37 AM PDT by SeekAndFind

The issue of $716 billion in spending cuts to Medicare has taken center stage, with accusations flying about who is raiding Medicare and pushing Granny off the cliff.

So here are the facts:

In 1997, the Republican Congress passed, and President Bill Clinton signed, the Balanced Budget Act (BBA), which gradually reduced payments to Medicare providers as part of a plan to reduce overall federal spending. The key to the policy is the Sustainable Growth Rate, which requires the government to adjust payments for physician services each year so that growth in Medicare spending does not exceed the growth of GDP.

But Medicare’s fee-for-service model works at cross-purposes with this policy, and incentivizes doctors to bill for more and more services, driving up Medicare spending to higher levels year after year. Further, each time the payment cuts are about to be triggered, doctors swarm Capitol Hill to get Congress to postpone them. At first, the payment cuts would have been just 1 or 2 percent if doctors hadn’t succeeded in killing them. But over time they have accumulated, and now doctors would be paid 27 percent less for treating Medicare patients if the originally intended cuts had gone into effect. And the cuts would continue in perpetuity.

Doctors say these payment reductions would cripple their practices and make it difficult for them to see Medicare patients, especially since Medicare already pays doctors less than private plans.

The American Medical Association wants a permanent “doc fix” that would end the threat of these cuts, and the fix was the main demand the AMA made when it was at the negotiating table over Obamacare. The White House promised the fix, but reneged at the last minute. The doc fix was yanked from the bill, largely because of its $208 billion price tag. Astonishingly, and much to the dismay of doctors across the country, the AMA endorsed Obamacare anyway, giving the bill an important push over the finish line.

Last month, following the Supreme Court’s disastrous decision about Obamacare, the Congressional Budget Office recalculated the ten-year cost of the health-overhaul law to determine what the court’s decision would mean to the overall cost of the law. The CBO concluded that the cuts to Medicare now total $716 billion over 10 years — chiefly because the ten-year window is moved three years into the future and, as health costs grow every year, so does Medicare spending. (The law contains other Medicare payment reductions as well.)

The president’s plan to “save” Medicare relies primarily on paying doctors and hospitals less and less by keeping in place the 1997 trajectory for spending cuts. According to Medicare actuaries, this would mean that 40 percent of providers eventually will either go bankrupt or stop seeing Medicare patients altogether.

To make sure that these spending targets are met, Obamacare creates the dreaded Independent Payment Advisory Board to enforce the cuts — and even more if needed. The IPAB puts the thumb screws in the Obamacare strategy, because the law makes it nearly impossible for Congress to override the board’s orders and shields the board’s decisions from judicial review — and patient input.

So now we get to the crucial dispute. Obamacare counts the same Medicare savings twice — once to allegedly extend the solvency of Medicare, and again to pay for Obamacare’s massive new subsidies for private health insurance through the exchanges.

Medicare actuaries have chastised the administration and its allies in Congress for this double-counting. Health and Human Services secretary Kathleen Sebelius was asked about the double-counting during a congressional hearing last year. “Are you using [the Medicare savings] to save Medicare or are you using it for health reform?” asked Representative John Shimkus (R., Ill.). “Both,” Sebelius answered.

If Obamacare were repealed, we would be protecting taxpayers from this dishonest trick of counting the Medicare savings twice. (All of these numbers, by the way, represent reductions in the rate of growth of Medicare spending, not actual cuts. Medicare spent $549 billion in 2011 and is projected to spend $809 billion in 2018. In any family budget, that definitely is not a cut.)

So what about the claims that House Budget Committee chairman Paul Ryan also cuts Medicare by $716 billion? Ryan’s budget follows current law. The BBA Medicare-payment reductions are federal law, and his budget necessarily uses federal law as a baseline.

Governor Mitt Romney says that if he is elected, he will eliminate the cuts. That’s actually a realistic promise, because that is what Congress does every year anyway. But this promise also will provide added incentive for a “permanent doc fix,” the Holy Grail of the AMA.

So here’s the bottom line: President Obama leaves the $716 billion in Medicare reductions in place, and he spends the money again to create a vast new Obamacare entitlement program. Paul Ryan doesn’t double-count this money. His budget leaves the BBA Medicare payment cuts in place, but also creates a plan to make the program more efficient by injecting market forces through competition and consumer choice. Ryan’s premium-support model would require health plans to compete for the business of future seniors by offering better benefits at lower prices. Seniors would be guaranteed coverage because Medicare would fully cover the premium costs of the second-lowest-cost plan or the cost of traditional Medicare, whichever is lower. Those who are older or sicker, or have lower incomes, would get additional help.

The market model has been proven to work in the Medicare Advantage and prescription-drug programs. Three Harvard researchers published a study in The Journal of the American Medical Association (you can find it here, but it requires a subscription) examining how premium support would have worked if it had been in effect in 2009. They found that, nationally, the benchmark plan bid an average of 9 percent below traditional Medicare costs.

Further, the Part D prescription-drug program in Medicare is saving taxpayers money and giving seniors better benefits. Seniors can choose the drug plan that offers them the best benefits at the lowest prices, and these smart shoppers have brought the cost of the program 42 percent lower than expected when the drug benefit was created in 2003.

It’s now a choice between the Romney-Ryan market-based model and Obamacare’s double-counting and price controls enforced by an unelected, unaccountable board charged with paying doctors less and less, to the point that 40 percent of them drop out. Let’s have an honest debate about which of the two visions actually would sustain Medicare, and has the best chance of getting the federal budget on a more sustainable track.

— Grace-Marie Turner is president of the Galen Institute and a co-author of Why ObamaCare Is Wrong for America.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: healthcare; medicare

1 posted on 08/17/2012 6:42:43 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind
So what about the claims that House Budget Committee chairman Paul Ryan also cuts Medicare by $716 billion? Ryan’s budget follows current law. The BBA Medicare-payment reductions are federal law, and his budget necessarily uses federal law as a baseline.

Make sure you understand this sentence. It will be the focus of the attacks by the Dems on Ryan's Plan.

2 posted on 08/17/2012 6:51:54 AM PDT by InterceptPoint (.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Well if you look at it from the standpoint that the present regime is a pack of lying, no good, self serving pack of stinking commie wannabes you can see which path should be taken.


3 posted on 08/17/2012 6:52:41 AM PDT by mongo141 (Revolution ver. 2.0, just a matter of when, not a matter of if!)
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To: InterceptPoint

Well in the case of Obama, What kind of spending reductions are we talking about?

They were mainly aimed at insurance companies and hospitals, not beneficiaries.

Obamacare makes significant reductions to Medicare Advantage, a subset of Medicare plans run by private insurers.

Medicare Advantage was started under President George W. Bush, and the idea was that competition among the private insurers would reduce costs. But in recent years the plans have actually cost more than traditional Medicare. So the health care law scales back the payments to private insurers.

Obamacare shifts seniors from the Medicare Advantage program and does not result in the elimination of Medicare coverage for anyone.

What we really need is a total-savings estimate, a point by point comparison of Obamacare vs. the Ryan plan.

We need cost estimates for changing the plan, an age cutoff for when it would be implemented, how the vouchers would be administered, how the government-controlled plan would be administered or what effect his proposals would have on the deficit or current budget.


4 posted on 08/17/2012 7:06:35 AM PDT by SeekAndFind (bOTRT)
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To: SeekAndFind

I’m sorry but I understand math and accounting reasonably well and the following sentence is clear as mud:

>>So here’s the bottom line: President Obama leaves the $716 billion in Medicare reductions in place, and he spends the money again to create a vast new Obamacare entitlement program. Paul Ryan doesn’t double-count this money. His budget leaves the BBA Medicare payment cuts in place, but also creates a plan to make the program more efficient by injecting market forces through competition and consumer choice. <<

What doesn “leaves the $716 billion in Medicare reductions in place” mean? To me it would mean that Obama’s budget makes the cuts. But then Ryan’s also leaves the cuts in place too, so he’s doing the same.

The only double-counting I can see is if one assumes that Congress will go ahead once again and delay the cuts year by year. Otherwise, both Ryan and Obama cut the $716 billion (by following the law on the books from the 90’s) but Obama uses it to fund Obamacare and Ryan uses it to implement a voucher plan of some sort.

Maybe someone has a different take on it and can explain it?


5 posted on 08/17/2012 7:53:17 AM PDT by Norseman (Defund the Left-Completely!)
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To: SeekAndFind

Bump for later.


6 posted on 08/17/2012 8:01:16 AM PDT by LuvFreeRepublic
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To: SeekAndFind

Bump for later.


7 posted on 08/17/2012 8:01:28 AM PDT by LuvFreeRepublic
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To: mongo141
BTW, The Obama team just released its own Whiteboard in response to Romney's.

Here is Romney's white board:



Here is the Obama campaign's response:
8 posted on 08/17/2012 8:18:12 AM PDT by SeekAndFind (bOTRT)
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To: SeekAndFind
$716 billion over 10 years is an average $1,376,923,000 reduction to the program, per week.
There are roughly 47 million Medicare recipients.
The average cost per recipient is a net $1,500 reduction in benefits, per year.
That's a loss of $125 per month per Medicare recipient.
9 posted on 08/17/2012 8:31:34 AM PDT by Sgt_Schultze (A half-truth is a complete lie)
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To: Sgt_Schultze; All

Well .. who’s going to need it anyway.

According to ObamaCare, when you reach 76 you will no longer be eligible for cancer treatment.

Just take your little pain pill and die!!

I’m at puke already with these liberals.


10 posted on 08/17/2012 10:01:57 AM PDT by CyberAnt ("America is the greatest nation on the face of the earth".)
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To: SeekAndFind

“The truth about Medicare”

The truth is that Medicare is a stealth bomb to destroy the Constutution and the practice of free-market economics, and it’s working.

Medicare (1965) promises that FedGov will pay “usual, customary, and reasonable” fees for ALL services provided to enrollees in a given year, without regard to how many services or what they cost.

That’s not a bug, that’s a feature.

Now, if you think about it for a minute, Congress cannot pass a budget that accurately allocates money for this purpose, BECAUSE NOBODY KNOWS HOW MUCH THE COST WILL BE.

Some Medicare services (maybe 20%, probably a little less) are services which are necessary to life AND are services for which afflicted seniors (or families) would willingly pay for. The rest is discretionary.

Take joint replacements. They are great. Currently existing technology, however, would never have come into being without Medicare’s promise to pay. Of all joint replacenets done/year in the US, how many would be done if the patient, or kids, or grandkids, had to pay cash? 10%? Maybe not even.

The flood of OPM unleashed by Medicare (mostly fiat FRNs and borrowed money) has created a fantastic wave of innovation. But none of it would have come about without the government’s promise to pay.

So, we can have a continued promise to pay if we keep borrowing from China and printing money. But if we fix the borrowing and fix the money, we cannot continue to have open-ended expenses within a closed budget system.

Why do you think Congress can’t pass a budget?


11 posted on 08/17/2012 10:13:28 AM PDT by Jim Noble (Diseases desperate grown are by desperate appliance relieved or not at all.)
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