Conservatives Devastated – Wanted Medicare to Die a Natural
Death
The Trustee of the
Social Security and Medicare systems annually announce the expected life of
the trust funds that support the two systems.
This year there
was good news for everyone, well almost everyone. On Medicare there was this.
Lower
health-care costs are improving the financial outlook for Medicare, the federal
health program for the elderly, extending the life of the trust fund that
supports the program until 2026 — two years later than previously forecast.
The new
projection, released Friday by the Social Security and Medicare Board of
Trustees, is an improvement of nine years in the forecast since passage of
President Obama’s Affordable Care Act. The trustees’ report credits the act
with part of the cost slowdown, particularly by placing new limits on Medicare
Advantage, a form of Medicare run by private insurers.
However,
the trustees also credit lower costs and use rates in “most . . . service
categories — especially skilled nursing facilities,” a development that most
economists believe is in part due to the recent recession, but also to more
fundamental efforts to reduce costs throughout the health-care industry.
Conservatives have been counting on the death of the Medicare
Trust Fund, which funds only one part of Medicare, to spur a change which would
turn Medicare over to private insurance companies, you know, the companies that
are just bending over backwards to see that their policy holders get all the
medical care they need.
On Social Security the news was neutral.
The
trustees reported no such improvement in the finances of Social Security, but
no significant deterioration, either. The combined trust fund that finances
both the disability benefits and the retirement benefits funds is still
forecast to run out in 2033, at which point the programs would only have enough
cash to pay about three-quarters of scheduled benefits.
But notice that the SS system does not go bankrupt. The worst case scenario, benefits are still
at 75% of scheduled amounts. This is not
good, but not a situation where everybody on Social Security gets nothing,
which is the scenario the doomsayers put out there.
The bad news
continues to be the Disability Fund.
Congress must act to shore up the trust fund for
disability benefits, which is still projected for depletion in just three years.
but a relatively small amount of general financing should do
the job unless of course Conservatives, whose position is that people who
cannot afford to have disabilities should not choose to get them, prevail.
Also everyone should remember that these are point
estimates, the expected value of a probability distribution of the models that
project revenues and expenses. So in the
real world, the one everyone lives in these estimates are probably going to be
wrong. We just don’t know in which
direction they will be wrong.
So stay tuned for next year’s numbers, and the year
after that and the year after that . . .
When the systems do exhaust their funds we’ll let you know.
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