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HOUSE OF THE WEEK

Thursday 16 August 2012

What Will Happen To Medicare?


The Republican National Committee chairman says President Barack Obama has "blood on (his) hands" for cutting Medicare. Mitt Romney blasts the President for having "robbed" the program of $700 billion.

Vice President Joe Biden accuses Romney and Paul Ryan of "gutting" Medicare. Obama warned that Romney-Ryan would "end Medicare as we know it."
Aren't you glad we're having a sober policy discussion about how to rein in entitlement spending?
The laws of political gravity drag every debate from the lofty realm of ideas to the grungy plain of invective. The more complex the issue, the more it is at risk of becoming a 30-second caricature.
Let's pause for a bit of fact-checking.

The cheeky response to the critique of Obama's Medicare cuts is that Ryan assumes those very cuts in his budget — the one passed by the House and endorsed as "marvelous" by Romney. So there are robbers and blood to spread around.
The slightly less cheeky response is to say: Aren't these the people who have been screaming about Medicare bankrupting the country? Shouldn't they be praising cuts, not denouncing them?

The on-the-merits response is that the cuts involve lower reimbursements to hospitals and nursing homes; reduced payments to insurers; higher premiums for better-off beneficiaries, and savings from lower hospital readmissions.
The fairer question is whether the savings should have been used to reduce the debt rather than to underwrite low-income subsidies in Obamacare. But since Romney-Ryan would do nothing to slow the growth of Medicare for a decade, they are not the ones to ask it.

Not that Democrats are more honest. The attack on Romney-Ryan studiously ignores the unpleasant reality that Medicare as we know it cannot continue. Meanwhile, an Obama campaign video of Floridians bemoaning the GOP team's Medicare plan somehow omits the salient fact that current beneficiaries and those near retirement would be unaffected.

The Romney-Ryan approach would transform Medicare by giving seniors a voucher to shop around for coverage on insurance exchanges. Insurers would have to take all applicants and not charge more to sicker seniors. Those with lower incomes would receive extra help to pay for premiums.
Sound familiar? Yes, like Obamacare — except Romney-Ryan has the public option that liberals were clamoring for back when. Seniors could decide to use their voucher to keep traditional fee-for-service coverage.

The addition of the traditional Medicare option was one key change Ryan made when he teamed up last year with Democratic Sen. Ron Wyden.
The second was to let vouchers grow more quickly over time. Under Ryan's original plan, the benefit would have increased only with the rate of inflation. Health care costs rise far faster, which is, of course, precisely the problem.

So the value of the voucher would be quickly eroded, and seniors would have to dig into their pockets to afford coverage. The Congressional Budget Office projected that a typical 65-year-old would have to pay another $6,500 a year.
The Wyden-Ryan proposal would allow the voucher to grow at a more generous rate — inflation plus economic growth plus 1 percent. That is the target set under Obamacare for the new cost control oversight board.

There are legitimate and important questions about this approach, beginning with the fundamental theory: that competition among insurance companies and more price-consciousness among beneficiaries will reduce costs.
Will this work?
Will traditional Medicare remain a viable option — or will private insurers manage to lure the healthiest seniors, driving sicker beneficiaries into Medicare producing a spiral of rising premiums?
Fair questions — but here's one, to Democrats and the President: What's your plan? They haven't offered one.

The current debate, with overblown, dueling accusations, helps explain why: details on a topic this emotional can be hazardous to your political health.
So as much as I welcome a vapid campaign's shift to substance, I worry about the aftereffect. The Ryan pick could move an essential discussion forward. But I worry that it could serve instead to reaffirm the danger of the third rail.


Edited By Cen Fox Post Team

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