New Report Sees Medicare Trust Fund Going Insolvent by 2017

CAL/AAEM News Service somcaaem at hs.uci.edu
Mon May 25 23:22:45 PDT 2009


[http://www.aaem.org/emails/images/calaaem_header.gif]
May 13, 2009

New Report Sees Medicare Trust Fund Going Insolvent by 2017

The California Healthline<http://www.californiahealthline.org/articles/2009/5/13/new-report-sees-medicare-trust-fund-going-insolvent-by-2017.aspx>

The trust fund that Medicare uses to pay for beneficiaries' hospital care will be insolvent by 2017, as the program since last year has been paying out more than it collects in taxes and interest, in part due to the worsening economy, according to a report the Medicare Boards of Trustees issued Tuesday, the Washington Times reports.

This estimated date of insolvency is two years earlier than that predicted by the trustees last year.

Medicare would have to deposit $13.4 trillion -- $1 trillion higher than last year's estimate -- into an interest-earning account today in order for the hospital fund to pay its scheduled benefits over the next 75 years, according to the boards.

The program's total unfunded obligation, which includes doctor and prescription drug benefits, is $37.8 trillion, the boards said (Dickson, Washington Times, 5/13).

These calculations include a 21% payment cut for providers scheduled to take effect this year. However, Congress typically has eliminated this reduction (Farnam, Wall Street Journal, 5/13).

"The financial outlook for the hospital insurance trust fund is significantly less favorable than projected in last year's annual report," the trustees said, adding, "Actual payroll tax income in 2008 and projected future amounts are significantly lower than previously projected, due to lower levels of average wages and fewer covered workers" (Pear, New York Times, 5/13).

Since the recession began, 5.7 million workers have lost their jobs, according to the Washington Times (Washington Times, 5/13).

The trustees estimated that in coming years, Medicare spending will rise faster than workers' earnings or the economy as a whole (New York Times, 5/13).

According to CQ HealthBeat, "'Exhaustion' of the hospital fund does not mean it would run out of money," but that it would be unable to pay full reimbursements for hospital benefits by 2017. The fund likely would pay 81 cents per dollar claimed by hospitals.

According to the report, the trust fund "would be brought into actuarial balance over the next 75 years by changes equivalent to an immediate 134% increase in the payroll tax ... or an immediate 53% reduction in program outlays, or some combination of the two" (Reichard, CQ HealthBeat, 5/12).

Trustees say that while the financial standing of Social Security decreased more sharply than Medicare last year, the health program remains at greater risk of insolvency (New York Times, 5/12).

This report would traditionally start a process known as the "Medicare trigger," which requires the president and Congress to develop legislation to extend Medicare's fiscal viability, but the House earlier this year approved rules that Democratic leaders said eliminated this requirement (CQ HealthBeat, 5/12).

Medicare Parts B, D

The Medicare programs that cover outpatient care and pharmaceuticals -- which are funded by premiums and taxes -- are not at risk of insolvency, although costs for beneficiaries are expected to rise along with overall health care spending, according to CQ Today (Clarke, CQ Today, 5/12).

If Social Security recipients receive no cost-of-living increase next year or in 2011, as predicted by the trustees, about one-quarter of Medicare beneficiaries -- including new beneficiaries and those whose incomes are higher than $85,000 for individuals or $170,000 for couples -- would have higher Part B premiums.

The beneficiaries would see monthly premiums for the outpatient benefit -- typically deducted from Social Security checks -- increase from $96.40 to about $104 in 2010 and $120 in 2011.

Three-quarters of Medicare beneficiaries would see no premium increases, but the remaining beneficiaries would have to pay more to keep the Part B trust fund at the same level (New York Times, 5/12).

Reaction

At a Tuesday press briefing, Treasury Department Secretary Timothy Geithner said, "The most effective entitlement reform measure will be a major health reform that helps bring down the growth rate of national health care spending" (CQ HealthBeat, 5/12).

HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius said that the best way to ensure Medicare's solvency is to "fix what's broken with the rest of the health care system," noting that if U.S. residents have health insurance and access to sufficient care earlier in their lives, they will be less expensive to care for once they join Medicare (Goldstein, Washington Post, 5/13).

When asked what the Obama administration would do if an overhaul does not produce desired results after a few years, Sebelius said, "We know that preventive care is more cost effective than critical care, ... that coordinating end-of-life care will help to lower costs in the long run, ... that if we can reduce readmission to the hospital ... and cut down on hospital infection that will lower overall costs" (CQ HealthBeat, 5/12).

The administration has proposed several changes to Medicare aimed at reducing spending, including cutting payments to private insurers and allowing the government to negotiate for lower prices from drugmakers. However, these potential savings "won't come close to fully offsetting the increasing cost of the program," the Wall Street Journal reports.

Many of these savings already are reserved for funding the administration's health reform plans (Wall Street Journal, 5/13).

House Ways and Means Health Subcommittee Chair Pete Stark (D-Calif.) said that "while opponents will use this as another excuse to arbitrarily slash and burn Medicare, our energies are better focused on how to reform our health system and rein in the rising health costs," adding that "we have seen worse reports in years past and the Congress has always stepped in to strengthen the program's financial footing, and we will do so again."

Senate Finance Committee ranking member Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) said, "Kicking the can down the road isn't an option anymore because we're at the end of the road. Necessary policy reform to add efficiency and improve Medicare's fiscal health without cutting benefits will take time to implement." He added, "If Congress waits, the savings from those changes won't materialize until after the program becomes insolvent. At that point, the only options would be cutting provider payments, reducing benefits or raising payroll taxes" (CQ HealthBeat, 5/12).

Rep. Tom Price (R-Ga.), head of the Republican Study Committee, said, "The government-run health care programs we already have are unsustainable. It should be obvious that putting more people under the inflexible control of Washington is no way to bring down medical costs, and it's certainly no way to provide health care of the highest quality" (Levey, Los Angeles Times, 5/12).

Abid Mogannam &
Brian Potts MD, MBA
Managing Editors, CAL/AAEM News Service
University of California, Irvine
Contact us at: somcaaem at uci.edu<mailto:somcaaem at uci.edu>

For more articles, visit our archives<http://maillists.uci.edu/mailman/public/calaaem/>.

To<mailto:somcaaem at uci.edu> unsubscribe<https://maillists.uci.edu/mailman/listinfo/calaaem> from this list, visit our mail server.

Copyright (C) 2008 The California Chapter of the American Academy of Emergency Physicians All rights reserved.

CAL/AAEM, a nonprofit professional organization for emergency physicians, operates the CAL/AAEM News Service solely as an educational resource for physicians. Dissemination of an article by CAL/AAEM News Service does not imply endorsement, agreement, or recommendation by CAL/AAEM News Service, CAL/AAEM, or AAEM.
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://maillists.uci.edu/mailman/public/calaaem/attachments/20090525/72e4d244/attachment-0001.html 


More information about the CALAAEM mailing list