The Kaiser Family Foundation reviewed Ryan’s original proposal and made several assessments that should be alarming to Medicare patients. Among proposals like raising the Medicare eligibility age to 67 instead of 65, it asks seniors to contribute a much larger share of their fixed incomes toward healthcare. It also repeals the section of the Affordable Care Act that allows the federal government to negotiate prescription drug prices for Medicare patients.
“Under the proposal, a typical 65-year-old retiring in 2022 would be expected to devote nearly half their monthly Social Security checks toward health care costs, more than double what they would spend under current Medicare law,” Kaiser wrote in its summary of the report. Kaiser also cited a Congressional Budget Office review of Ryan’s proposal, citing how much seniors would be expected to pay for healthcare costs in a private health insurance plan as opposed to Medicare:
According to the CBO analysis, the total cost of providing health care benefits (premium and other costs) to a typical 65-year old in a private plan would be about $20,500 in 2022. The government would contribute $8,000 or 39 percent toward the total cost, and the remaining $12,500 would be paid by the beneficiary. The CBO projects that out-of-pocket costs for the typical 65-year old would be more than twice as large under the proposal than under traditional Medicare ($5,630) in 2022, because the cost of providing benefits is greater under private plans than under traditional Medicare.
The higher out-of-pocket costs under the Ryan plan is particularly problematic under the current payment structure for seniors who depend on their earned Social Security benefits as their sole source of income. In their analysis, Kaiser found that for the average senior who receives just $2,130 per month in Social Security benefits (using 2022 figures, which is when the Ryan plan would take effect), a retiree would have to pay $1041.66 of that income for their healthcare.
While Speaker Ryan argues that the motivation behind his proposal to privatize Medicare is done to save federal money over the long term, Kaiser pointed out that the Congressional Budget Office’s math paints a different picture. According to the CBO’s analysis, private health insurance subsidies would actually be far more costly than simply continuing the Medicare program as is:
While private plans may be able to achieve lower utilization through tighter cost and care management practices, the CBO believes the total costs of providing a similar benefit package would be higher under private plans than Medicare, and that the differential between the costs under traditional Medicare and the costs under private plans would widen over time.During his campaign, Donald Trump vowed to not alter Medicare or Social Security. According to Forbes, Trump has vowed to “save Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security without cuts.” However, at least one member of Trump’s team has stated the opposite, making the President-elect’s position on the longstanding healthcare program ambiguous.
Trump’s ambiguity on changing Medicare into a privatized system may be the one check on Paul Ryan as the new Congress prepares to gavel in next year. Ryan has stated he plans to write his Medicare privatization plan into a budget reconciliation bill — a procedure that circumvents any potential Democratic filibuster.
1 comment:
I wonder how many hundreds of billions the Republicrats will spend on wars this year.
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