Skip to main content

Get Medicare Out of the Debt Debate

The U.S. debt debate is heating up as Congress and the President argue about the “cut, cap, and balance” plan and move closer to the August 2nd deadline to raise the debt ceiling.

The debt debate is important.  Our U.S. debt is now over $14 trillion, and we need to do something about it.  But Medicare cuts are on the table, and war spending is not.

So I would like to propose a switch.  Take Medicare cuts off the table, and put war cuts on it.
The wars in Afghanistan and Iraq have cost this country over $1.2 trillion since 2001.  The debt ceiling wouldn’t even be an issue if it weren’t for these, because we never paid for them.  We got the two men we wanted.  It’s time to pay the bill and get out.

On the other hand, the 2011 summary of the annual report of the Medicare Trust Fund trustees shows that we still have surpluses in the Medicare Trust Funds.  The Medicare Part A Trust Fund had $271.9 billion in it in 2010.  The Part B and D Trust Fund had $72.1 billion in it. 
Contrary to what some members of Congress would like us to believe, Medicare isn’t responsible for today’s national debt.

We should be talking about Medicare not because it has contributed to our debt, but because Medicare taxes are not covering the full cost of Medicare today and we’re dipping into the Trust Fund balance.
It won’t take very much to wipe out the Medicare deficit - certainly not as much as the Medicare “sky is falling down” politicians want us to believe. 

The net government outlay for Medicare in 2010 was in the vicinity of $450 billion for a program that covers over 48 million Americans.  Gross spending was about $100 billion higher than that, and included premium payments, co-pays, and costs covered by other non-governmental revenues. 
To pay for this, the Medicare Part A Trust Fund had $215 billion of income in 2010, including interest.  $182 billion came from dedicated Medicare taxes.  The Medicare Part B and D Trust Fund had $212 billion of total income, about $205 million of which was general tax revenues.

Those reflect a shortfall in Medicare tax revenues, which are supposed to cover the cost of the program.   The shortfall for this year isn’t insignificant.  It is projected to be $34 billion in the Medicare Part A Trust Fund, and that will have to come from the Trust Fund balance.
However, this short-term problem was almost completely solved by the passage of the Affordable Care Act, which includes a .9% Medicare tax increase for high wage earners beginning in three years.  Because of the ACA, even if Congress does nothing more to address the Medicare shortfall, it will go down to only $6 billion, or 1.8%, by 2016.

But that’s not good enough for the trustees, who also look at the problem from a long term perspective.  Today’s negative numbers will add up before then, wiping out almost half of today’s $270 billion balance in the next five years.
Looking 75 years down the road, the trustees identified another problem.  They calculated the current Medicare cost to be 3.76% of taxable payroll, and project that it will grow to 4.9% of taxable payroll in 2085. The current Medicare tax rate, however, is only 2.9% of taxable payroll.

So, now we know what it would take to close the long-term Medicare shortfall using tax revenues alone – a 2% increase in the Medicare tax rate.  Half of this would be paid by individual taxpayers and half by their employers.
This would cost the average American making $45,000 per year less than $38 per month.  It would preserve Medicare as we know it today for him, his children, his grandchildren, and probably even his great-grandchildren.

That’s it.  If we did this, we wouldn’t need to embrace any of the bad ideas floating around Congress today, such as privatizing Medicare, creating Medicare vouchers, further limiting or eliminating the prescription drug benefit, forcing beneficiaries into HMOs, or raising the age of eligibility.
But if we were to do anything positive to contain costs in the next seventy-five years, such as keeping our population healthier or finding cures for any of our major chronic diseases, it would take even less to guarantee every American low-cost health insurance in retirement. 

Think we can’t afford this?  The average monthly cost per Medicare taxpayer for the two wars for the last ten years has been around $63 per month.  Before continuing the cold war on Medicare, we should stop throwing away money on the hot ones.

If you have questions about this column or wish to be added to an email list letting you know when new Our Health Policy Matters columns are published, please email gionfriddopaul@gmail.com.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Veterans and Mental Illness

On a sultry June morning in our national’s capital last Friday, I visited the Vietnam Veterans Memorial .   Scores of people moved silently along the Wall, viewing the names of the men and women who died in that war.   Some stopped and took pictures.   One group of men about my age surrounded one name for a photo.   Two young women posed in front of another, perhaps a grandfather or great uncle they never got to meet. It is always an incredibly moving experience to visit the Wall.   It treats each of the people it memorializes with respect. There is no rank among those honored.   Officer or enlisted, rich or poor, each is given equal space and weight. It is a form of acknowledgement and respect for which many veterans still fight. Brave Vietnam veterans returned from Southeast Asia to educate our nation about the effects of war and violence. I didn’t know anything about Post Traumatic Stress Disorder when I entered the Connecticut Legislature in the late 1970s.   I had only vag

Scapegoats and Concepts of a Plan: How Trump Fails Us

When a politician says he has “concepts of a plan” instead of a plan, there is no plan. And yet, that’s where we are with Donald Trump, nine years after he first launched a political campaign promising to replace Obamacare with something cheaper and better, nearly four years after he had four years to try to do just that. And fail. Doubling down during Tuesday’s debate, he claimed he had “concepts of a plan” to replace Obamacare. Really? He’s got nothing. In fact, he sounds just like Nixon sounded in 1968, when he claimed he had a “secret” plan to get us out of Vietnam. That turned out to be no plan at all (remember “Vietnamization?”) and cost us seven more years there and tens of thousands of lives. The Affordable Care Act, about which I wrote plenty in this blog a decade or more ago, wasn’t perfect. But it was a whole lot better than what we had before it – and anything (save a public option) that has been proposed since. Back then, insurers could deny coverage because of pre-exi

The Missing Mental Health Element in the Ferguson Story

By now, everyone has heard the news from Ferguson, Missouri.  An unarmed 18 year old named Michael Brown was shot and killed by a police officer.  Michael Brown was black. Some of the events surrounding the shooting are in dispute.  But what isn’t in dispute is that for the past two weeks, a community has been torn apart by race – a community that until recently was best known for its proximity to St. Louis and its designation as a Playful City, USA . Picture credit: Health Affairs Media reports since the August 9 th shooting have focused almost entirely on one angle – race relations.  We’ve heard about unrest in the city, the National Guard, police in riot gear, and danger in the streets.  We’ve heard about the District Attorney’s ties to law enforcement, and concerns that a too-white Grand Jury may be racially motivated not to indict the police officer involved in the deadly shooting. But the media have been strangely silent about a different angle – this comm