More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Dean Baker

GET UPDATES FROM Dean Baker

Does President Obama Want to Impose a Crushing Burden on Our Children?

Posted: 09/12/11 05:37 PM ET

Sorry deficit fanatics, this one has nothing to do with the cost of the stimulus or the deficits run-up during the Obama years. We're talking real money here. We're talking about plans to raise the age of Medicare eligibility to 67.

To deficit hawks everywhere this is a great way to save the government money. Life-expectancy at age 65 is roughly 20 years. Therefore raising the age of eligibility for Medicare by two years would shave roughly 10 percent off the program's budget. (The actual saving would be somewhat less since it is cheaper to treat people when they are 65 and 66 than in their 80s or 90s.) For a program that is projected to cost more than $1 trillion a year (at 5 percent of GDP) in a decade, and even more in following decades, this would amount to real savings.

But the cost of this savings is a much higher health care bill for beneficiaries. As it is now, millions of people in their 60s struggle to hang onto jobs that provide health care insurance or do without, hoping that they can make it until 65 without a major medical problem. This proposal pushes the magic age out two more years.

And there should be no mistake; the cost of insurance for someone in his/her mid-60s is a real burden. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) projected that the cost (in 2011 dollars) of insuring someone in the private sector at age 65 will be $15,500 a year in 2022.

This would be roughly equal to the average Social Security benefit for someone turning age 65 in that year. In other words, for the majority of workers who will have retired by age 65, the proposal to raise the age of eligibility to 67 implies that they will have to spend more than half of their income on health care.

The situation will be considerably worse for the large number of beneficiaries who have pre-existing conditions. They can expect to pay two or three times as much for their health insurance. In principle, President Obama's health care plan should prevent insurers from discriminating based on pre-existing conditions, but the smart money isn't betting on that one right now.

Many, or perhaps most, 65-year olds will qualify for Medicaid, so they may still be able to afford health care. However, the quality will almost certainly be worse, since Medicaid generally provides lower quality care.

This raises two additional issues. Instead of guaranteeing middle-class workers decent health care in their old age, we will be telling them that they will have to rely on a program that was intended to provide health care to poor people. So people who spent decades working as school teachers, firefighters, and in other middle-class occupations will need to turn to an anti-poverty program to get health care in their older years.

The other issue is even more disturbing. By switching people age 65 and 66 from Medicare to private insurance we will be hugely raising the cost of insurance for the country as a whole. Medicare is the most efficient part of the national health care system. It both saves money on administrative costs and is more effective in holding down payments to providers than private insurers.

Based on CBO's analysis of the Paul Ryan plan, my colleague David Rosnick calculated that raising the age of Medicare eligibility to 67, beginning in 2022, would increase the cost of health care to seniors by $3.9 trillion over Medicare's 75-year planning horizon. However, only $1.3 trillion of this cost would be savings to the government. The rest, almost $2.7 trillion, would be the additional cost of providing health care through the private health care system rather than Medicare. (All numbers are in 2011 dollars.)

In other words, the proposal to raise the age of Medicare eligibility to 67 is a proposal to increase health care costs to our children and grandchildren by $2.7 trillion. The idea that this cut is being presented as somehow helping our children is a sick joke that would only be taken seriously in Washington political circles.

The reality of health care costs is simple. We have two choices. We can fix our health care system and get payments to providers down to reasonable levels, as every other country in the world has done. Or, we can protect the insurers, the pharmaceutical companies, the hospitals, and the highly paid medical specialists, and tell people that they will have to do without care.

The proponents of raising the age of Medicare eligibility are clearly in the "do without care" camp. This group is a small but powerful minority. Let's see if they can buy this proposal into law.

 

Follow Dean Baker on Twitter: www.twitter.com/DeanBaker13

Sorry deficit fanatics, this one has nothing to do with the cost of the stimulus or the deficits run-up during the Obama years. We're talking real money here. We're talking about plans to raise the ag...
Sorry deficit fanatics, this one has nothing to do with the cost of the stimulus or the deficits run-up during the Obama years. We're talking real money here. We're talking about plans to raise the ag...
 
 
  • Comments
  • 345
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Highlights
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4 5  Next ›  Last »  (7 total)
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
John Di Saia
An Opinionated Plastic Surgeon in the OC
04:12 PM on 09/18/2011
Repealing the prescription drug program makes more sense or at least scaling it back.
11:48 PM on 09/13/2011
The really weird thing is the fact that every single developed country in the world has health care from cradle to grave. It costs less and the people live longer. But Republicans wouldn't want that since it would hurt the insurance companies. So choose. Health care or insurance companies. I know it is a stranfe thought but you would actually be saving money. OMG What would you have to do if the government actually saved nmoney and the country became healthier. In case you didn't know it the poor go the emergency and tax payers pay for that. They pay a king's ransome for that and the poor are not as well cared for as they would be if they had a doctor.
ThePeacemakers
Concerned Citizen
05:51 PM on 09/13/2011
"In other words, for the majority of workers who will have retired by age 65, the proposal to raise the age of eligibility to 67 implies that they will have to spend more than half of their income on health care."

Wrong. You're just talking about HEALTH INSURANCE. Not HEALTH CARE.

When actual health CARE enters the pic, especially if there's a serious injury or acciden, it will be even more of a percentage of the income of earners below six figures.
04:12 PM on 09/13/2011
The biggest problem with US healthcare is that most people don't care about their health. The other countries with lower healthcare costs don't have nearly the obesity rate as we do, or the number of smokers, or the high rate of unhealthy food consumption, or the lack of exercise. The CDC estimates over 20% of our healthcare costs are due to our high rate of obesity alone. A little more personal responsibility would go a long way toward reducing healthcare costs.
eugik
Start making sense ...
04:32 PM on 09/13/2011
Goes back to education, the department of which some Republicans want to get rid of.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
frank day
Republican = FAIL
03:02 PM on 09/13/2011
The real "crushing" burden will be if we fail to educate the next generation or

if we leave behind a collapsing infrastructure.

We need to move forward, not hoard all of our pennies under the mattress.
02:21 PM on 09/13/2011
The costs are going to be the same, the question is who will and
who should (or can) pay for a person's medical care. Since people
are living longer and demanding ever more of it, something will end
up having to give. In my view the problem is unfixable because we
are the land of gimme gimme, demand that healtcare fix the
consequences of our bad habits and keep us alive no matter the
cost or the quality of what life remains. There is no happy outcome,
this is the dismal science on life support. Maybe we could just quit
pretending that anybody gets out of here alive and quit clawing at
the furniture on our way out. But I doubt it. Everybody wants to go
to heaven, but nobody wants to go now.
photo
santafesam
smart&snarky
04:25 PM on 09/13/2011
Feel free to crawl off and die quietly at your earliest convenience.
10:18 PM on 09/13/2011
Sorry, Slick, when I go it's gonna be full throttle. It damn sure isn't gonna be on life support on somebody else's tab. Living will on file.
photo
kamachanda
Mr. President, Tear this Wall Street down!
02:02 PM on 09/13/2011
If we want to save money on medicare, perhaps we shouldn't let medical cost be driven by for profit medical corporations and insurance companies.
photo
santafesam
smart&snarky
04:26 PM on 09/13/2011
This IS the only answer.
photo
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
jsgaetano
Semper Fidelis Tyrannosaurus!
01:30 PM on 09/13/2011
Right... we need to have janitors and maids and plumbers work longer, because doctors and lawyers and bankers are living longer.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wayne the pain
01:01 PM on 09/13/2011
If it is a compromise with the faschist on the right it will be ok with "Mr. Compromise at any price" Obama!
photo
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
jsgaetano
Semper Fidelis Tyrannosaurus!
01:32 PM on 09/13/2011
It's not compromise if you get what you wanted in the first place. Obama is a conservative who has been pulling the Democrats in to accepting his far right plans, and he just says "oh, that's the best we could possibly do". Look at health care- he had two supermajorities, and he STILL passed a health care bill only the Heritage Foundation could love.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kvanness
Follow the money and the rest will make sense
12:41 PM on 09/13/2011
The only reason Medicaire is even being discussed is because the Tea Party demanded it when they were holding a gun to the American economy during the debt ceiling debate.

Don't you dare act like Obama wanted this.
11:56 AM on 09/13/2011
I'm very much in favor of Medicare, but problems like Medicare costs can't be solved by simple formulas that only examine expenditures. The fact is, 65 isn't 'old' these days nor should you be sick at 65, unless you have chosen to (a) eat high fat, high junk value foods most of your life; (b) not taken care of your health through daily exericse, and (c) allowed yourself to be grossly overweight and increased risks for diabetes and heart disease. Those are personal decisions that require personal accountability. Moving the eligibility age to 67 would encourage people to take better care of their health, rather than expect a 'fix' from a doctor or the Medicare system.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
11:52 AM on 09/13/2011
Attempts to shift Huffington Post to the extreme right get more and more blatant each week.

LOL
10:22 AM on 09/13/2011
Medical insurance is a chimera. All medical insurance does (private and public) is drive up the cost of care for simple day to day needs. As I recall, in the late 60's, you could see the local general practitioner without an appointment and be charged only $5 cash following treatment. Insurance wasn't an option. He didn't talk much and focused his practice on treating SICK PEOPLE with a few high school sports physicals and vaccinations thrown in. At a certain hour, they would lock entry to the waiting room, but the doctor would stay until all patients were treated. On rare occassions, he made house calls. He and his family lived in a nice home, but it was by no means spectacular. There was no constant testing and residual care, and few prescriptions because he provided COMPLETE TREATMENT.

If we want the medical community to perform its intended function at an acceptable price, the patient must pay for normal day to day care, and doctors must post their prices in the waiting room. Medical insurance (public and private) must be solely for unanticipated catastrophic events that are beyond the means of average people's incomes.
12:35 PM on 09/13/2011
F&F

We don't use our auto insurance to pay for gas (prescriptions), new tires (check-up) and a small dent (stitches).

We also need to get the lawyers out of the medical field. Up to 30% of medical expenses is related to unnecessary testing resulting from a fear of getting sued.
eugik
Start making sense ...
04:41 PM on 09/13/2011
Jerry, I was not there in the 60's, so I have to ask you questions. What constitutes "normal day to day care" ? What would be the dollar price of that care? The reason I am asking is that if certain "normal day to day care" is affordable for everyone, maybe that care should become available to everybody (meaning free or for some very nominal cost). Thank you. Please let me know.
photo
DenverBigDaddy
Conservative does not equal Tea Party....
10:19 AM on 09/13/2011
"Does he want to impose......." um.....you mean other than that $5T he's added to the national debt?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
RadicalRaul
11:32 AM on 09/13/2011
Trolling are we?
photo
CSDofNM
I speak lolcat
10:08 AM on 09/13/2011
If we raise the eligibility age to 99, Social Security will be solvent forever. At least until we get android bodies.