Miami Herald (Sunday)

Congress better face facts: Medicare is heading over the cliff

- Robert E. Moffit, Ph.D., is a senior fellow in domestic policy studies at The Heritage Foundation. ©2021 Tribune Content Agency BY ROBERT E. MOFFIT The Heritage Foundation

Official Washington, D.C., just got another early warning. The Congressio­nal Budget Office recently confirmed the Medicare trustees’ 2020 report that the Medicare trust fund — the Part A account that funds the hospitaliz­ation and related services — faces insolvency in 2026.

Insolvency means that Medicare wouldn’t be able to fully reimburse hospitals, nursing homes and home health agencies for promised benefits. In 2026, Medicare payments would be immediatel­y cut by 10 percent, and the payment cuts would continue each year thereafter.

Medicare patients would be hit hard. You cannot cut provider payments for medical services without impacting the beneficiar­ies.

Washington policymake­rs must soon make some big decisions and cannot escape responsibi­lity for what will happen to the program, its beneficiar­ies or the taxpayers.

There is nothing new here. Medicare trustees have repeatedly warned Congress and the White House that the Medicare trust fund meets neither short- nor long-term financial standards. It has been routinely running tens of billions of dollars in annual deficits and is expected to generate red ink well into the future.

A demographi­c imbalance is increasing the pressure. The trustees report that over the last 35 years, Medicare enrollment doubled and is projected to grow by 50 percent over the next 35 years. Meanwhile, the number of workers supporting Medicare beneficiar­ies is shrinking.

In 2008, there were four workers per beneficiar­y; in 2019, that declined to three workers per beneficiar­y. By 2030, there will be only 2.5 workers supporting each Medicare beneficiar­y.

If Congress and the White House really wanted to eliminate Medicare trust-fund deficits altogether — a big if — the trustees say that Washington could either raise the standard payroll tax from 2.9 percent to 3.66 percent immediatel­y or reduce Medicare trust fund expenditur­es by 16 percent.

That is unlikely.

The Medicare trustees nonetheles­s posit these stark options to “illustrate the magnitude” of the changes needed to eliminate deficits and insolvency. They recognize, however, that such immediate changes would be unpalatabl­e, and measures are likely to be more gradual. Even so, the longer Washington waits, the more painful the solutions become.

Any hike in the federal payroll taxes to stave off the impending insolvency would be an untimely blow for small businesses, their workers and their families following the government lockdowns, the recent economic contractio­n and massive job losses.

And cutting Medicare payments to Part A providers even more carries risks of its own. The Affordable Care Act already authorizes big future Medicare payment reductions to hospitals, nursing homes and home-health agencies. Within the next 20 years, government actuaries report, ACA provider payment reductions will guarantee financial losses and jeopardize Medicare beneficiar­ies’ access to quality care.

More recently, these institutio­ns suffered a serious financial blow from government edicts to cancel scheduled care in response to the pandemic. Even though hospital revenues have begun to rebound, and Congress provided them with emergency payments, some hospitals are still struggling financiall­y. This would not be a propitious time to hit them with another cut in Medicare reimbursem­ent rates.

Finally, Congress could turn on the general revenue spending spigot to cover trust-fund losses. That would drop the pretense that Medicare Part A can continue as a “social insurance” program paid for by Medicare beneficiar­ies during their working lives. But that would pour more gasoline on Washington’s raging fiscal fires, generating even higher deficits and dangerous debt — now estimated at over $27 trillion — beyond that incurred by recent pandemic spending.

Painless solutions are nonexisten­t. But targeted solutions are available. Congress could enact a temporary Part A premium — the equivalent of a surcharge — to cover the Medicare trust fund’s projected deficit, and eliminate it when the fund is rebalanced.

But addressing the hospitaliz­ation trust fund crisis is only the beginning of serious Medicare reform. Washington policymake­rs must also phase in more substantia­l changes, including raising the age of eligibilit­y to 67 in harmony with Social Security and indexing it to life expectancy, and further expanding

“means testing” to reduce the burdens on middle income taxpayers and beneficiar­ies.

The big change would be to build on the successes of Medicare Advantage, Medicare’s system of competing private health plans, and enact a comprehens­ive definedcon­tribution program and harness the powerful forces of consumer choice and market competitio­n. That would not only improve the quality of care, but also control costs for beneficiar­ies and taxpayers alike.

That is a big job, and it must start sooner rather than later. It will take a combinatio­n of brains, guts and bipartisan cooperatio­n. It’s called statesmans­hip.

 ?? Getty Images ?? According to the Congressio­nal Budget Office, the hospitaliz­ation portion of Medicare is facing insolvency in 2026.
Getty Images According to the Congressio­nal Budget Office, the hospitaliz­ation portion of Medicare is facing insolvency in 2026.
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