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MEDICARE: Rx for Medicare
By Thomas J. Healey
If you think the Social Security system is in bad shape, take a look at Medicare. How to fix one of the worst problems facing the nation. By Thomas J. Healey and Robert Steel.
While President George W. Bush remains focused on
Social Security, an even bigger fiscal
time bomb is ticking away in the United States—Medicare.
The Social Security trust fund is projected to become
exhausted in 2041, but the public health system runs completely dry much
sooner: in 2020. What is more, to bring Social Security into balance over
the next 75 years would require a 15 percent
increase in payroll taxes today (or a corresponding reduction in benefits), whereas
bringing Medicare into balance would require an immediate 107 percent increase in revenue (or a 48
percent reduction in outlays).Even more
significant, the present underfunding of Medicare ($29.7 trillion) is more than seven times that of Social Security
($4 trillion).
Few leaders in Washington seem willing to face the
fact that Medicare is a structurally broken system—in far worse shape
than Social Security—that could bring the American economy to its
knees in a relatively short amount of time.
As accumulating evidence makes abundantly clear,
Medicare is not just an undercapitalized system but a severely flawed
model. One of its biggest defects is the
inherent mismatch between revenues and expenditures. Medicare is largely funded through a
payroll tax of 2.9 percent and through premiums from Supplementary Medical Insurance (SMI). Because they are
tied to the rate of business growth, payroll
revenues have proven to be woefully insufficient, particularly in economically stressed times such as the past few
years. SMI premiums, for their part, only cover 12 percent of total
Medicare costs. Not surprisingly, the Medicare trustees predict that the
program’s assets—which are held in
Medicare trust funds to cover the hospital insurance portion of the health plan—will
be exhausted by 2019. To illustrate the deterioration, four years ago the prediction was depletion by 2025.
Exacerbating the problem is the fact that, over the
past 40 years, medical costs have outstripped economic growth by 3 percentage points. A
chief driver of
this increase has been dramatic advances in medical technology and patient treatment—obvious benefits that unfortunately
carry a huge price tag.
Faced with this looming crisis, why have no serious
efforts been made to treat the root of the problem?
Few, if any, incentives exist to prudently manage or
control the cost of medical treatment. In the case of retired people, they
will undertake treatment as long as the value of that care is more than the
copayment for which they are responsible. In the case of providers of
medical care—doctors, nurses, and other health
professionals—any desire to restrain costs through less-expensive
treatment alternatives is often overridden by self-interest or the perceived need for treatment that is, in fact,
excessive. Finally, politicians have virtually
no short-term inducements to tackle the Medicare problem. Any change that
leaves the elderly worse off will lead to ballot box reprisals by a large and vocal segment of the population. On the other
hand, pressure from much younger workers
who fund Medicare is nearly nonexistent.
Given the magnitude of the problem, there is unlikely
to be a single solution. Policies need to target the inequities caused by
misaligned incentives if they are to bring costs and benefits closer
together. Even this may be insufficient, however, creating the need for
reductions in entitlements or increases in taxes and costs to beneficiaries
(possibly involving some form of means test) or both. Implicit in such
policy change is the realization that all stakeholders—not just the
young—need to bear the burden of making Medicare sustainable. We
cannot keep blindly passing on Medicare’s costs to future
generations. Although this is a daunting task, it is not without precedent.
A similar, albeit smaller, imbroglio involving Social Security was
effectively addressed in the early 1980s by a bipartisan commission headed
by Alan Greenspan. This presidentially appointed panel was strikingly
successful in strengthening the fabric of a fraying Social Security system.
That model could—and clearly should—be
adopted for Medicare. The sooner we get started the better; delay
exacerbates the problem and makes solutions even more painful.
This essay appeared in the Financial Times on June 6, 2005.
Available from the Hoover Press is Power to the Patient: Selected Health Care Issues and Policy Solutions, edited by Scott Atlas. To order, call 800.935.2882 or visit www.hooverpress.org.
Thomas J. Healey is a member of the Hoover Institution Board of Overseers and a senior fellow at Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government. He served as assistant secretary of the Treasury under President Reagan.
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