Raising the Medicare Eligibility Age: A Costly and Dangerous Proposal Fact: Raising the Medicare Eligibility Age Would Cost More Than It Saves By increasing the age at which people can receive Medicare, and thereby shrinking the Medicare eligibility pool, the Congressional Budget Office estimates that the federal government would save $148 billion over the next ten years.[1] However, higher federal spending in Medicaid in the same period as a result of those who would otherwise be Medicare eligible turning to Medicaid, would reduce that amount by a quarter to just $113 billion over ten years. In 2014 alone, a full raise in the eligibility age would save $5.7 billion dollars for the federal government, but it would also cost $11.4 billion – twice the federal net savings – in higher costs to other areas of the budget and economy.[2] The across-the-board benefit cut would effectively raise total health care spending; for every dollar the federal government would save from raising the age, other costs would increase by $1.10.[3] Increasing overall health spending is the wrong approach and is already a problem facing payers across the private and public sectors.[4] Fact: Raising the Medicare Eligibility Age Would Increase Costs for States, Employers, and Individuals Without Medicare coverage to rely on, individuals would seek coverage from other sources including employers and states already grappling with strained resources and climbing health costs. Insuring 65 and 66 year olds would cost employers $4.5 billion in retiree health care costs in 2014 alone. States would face $700 million in new spending for the same period.[5] In addition, individuals and families with coverage in the state and federal health exchanges beginning in 2014 would see their premiums rise as a result of 65 and 66 year olds, an older and more costly population, seeking coverage through the exchanges. Adding would-be Medicare beneficiaries into the exchanges would raise premiums for everyone else by 3% in 2014 because insurers who previously did not have to cover the more expensive population would likely have to make up the difference in cost by passing them onto the rest of the exchange enrollees. Similarly, Medicare beneficiaries with coverage would face $1.8 billion in higher premiums because the younger and relatively healthier 65 and 66 year old beneficiaries would be taken out of the program's risk pool. Medicare beneficiaries would also see their premiums rise by 3% if the eligibility age is raised.[6] Raising the age may seem to yield federal savings, but those costs are not truly saved, merely shifted to states, employers, individuals and Medicare beneficiaries who already face high health costs and who cannot afford this added burden. Fact: Raising the Medicare Eligibility Age Would Leave Many People Uninsured, with Higher Out-of-Pocket Costs
Fact: Raising the Medicare Eligibility Age Would Disproportionately Harm Lower-Income Americans and Communities of Color Among the hardest hit by the possibility of a rise in the Medicare age of eligibility would be communities of color, low-income Americans, and blue-collar workers. People of color tend to be in poorer health at earlier ages and have not seen as dramatic an increase in life expectancy as non-Hispanic white Americans. In fact, the life expectancy for African-American men is only 70.8 according to recent data.[9] Raising the age to 67 would seriously affect diverse communities: 34% of Hispanics and 26% of African-Americans aged 65 and 66 would become uninsured, rates over four times hgher than non-Hispanic white Americans in the same age group. In addition, 23% of Americans with incomes below 200% of the poverty line would become uninsured.[10] Blue-collar workers with physically demanding jobs who are unable to delay retirement would also be significantly harmed.[11] Fact: A Clear Majority of Americans Oppose Raising the Medicare Eligibility Age A new poll this week shows that 67% of Americans are opposed to raising the Medicare eligibility age to 67, with strong opposition surpassing strong support by a 3-1 margin.[12] The new data shows the opposition is shared by the majority of Democrats and Republicans, with at least 68% of each expressing opposition- a bipartisan consensus. Fact: There Are Ways to Achieve Substantial Savings in Medicare That Don't Hurt Older or Disabled People and Their Families There are real ways to save money in the Medicare program that would extend its solvency and lower costs for beneficiaries at the same time.[13] Just one of those proposals – allowing drug prices to be negotiated in the Medicare program – would save an estimated $156 billion over ten years; savings more significant than those gained by raising the eligibility age.[14] Policymakers who are serious about reducing overall health care costs, the real culprit driving high spending across the system, should consider proposals that work toward improving health coverage and outcomes while lowering costs for payers and beneficiaries.[15] Simply shifting costs onto beneficiaries while ignoring the real potential for savings in areas like pharmaceutical prices is both short-sighted and fails to address overall health spending. The Bottom Line: American Families Can't Afford to Wait Longer or Pay More for Medicare Asking older Americans and their families to bear the burden of deficit reduction by increasing the eligibility age would cause much more harm than is reflected in estimates of federal budget savings. States, employers, younger Americans not yet on Medicare, and Medicare beneficiaries simply cannot afford to have more costs shifted onto them, particularly as our economy slowly recovers. The percentage of uninsured older and disabled people will increase, while those with Medicare and those in insurance exchanges will owe higher premiums. Lower-income Americans and communities of color will face disproportionate harm at a time when health reform efforts aim to reduce health disparities among those communities. Cutting Medicare, instead of investing in real solutions, is a dangerous proposal that would have real implications for millions of Americans and their families and would constitute a significant step backward in the effort to improve American's health and lower costs.
For more information, contact Policy Associate Xenia Ruiz (xruiz@medicareadvocacy.org) or Attorney David Lipschutz (dlipschu@medicareadvocacy.org) in the Center for Medicare Advocacy's Washington, DC office.
[2]Center for Budget and Policy Priorities: Raising Medicare’s Eligibility Age would Increase Overall Health Spending and Shift Costs to Seniors, States, and Employers, August 2011. Available at http://www.cbpp.org/cms/?fa=view&id=3564. [3] Henry J. Aaron, Ph. D, The Brookings Institution for AARP Public Policy Institute, Perspectives: Reforming Medicare: Option-Raise the Medicare Eligibility Age, available at http://www.aarp.org/content/dam/aarp/research/public_policy_institute/health/option-raise-the-medicare-eligibility-age-AARP-ppi-health.pdf. [4] Center for American Progress, The Senior Protection Plan, available at http://www.americanprogress.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/11/SeniorProtectionPlan.pdf. [5] Kaiser Family Foundation: Raising the Age of Medicare Eligibility: A Fresh Look Following the Implementation of Health Reform, July 2011, available at http://www.kff.org/medicare/8169.cfm. [6] Ibid. [7] Kaiser Family Foundation, Health Reform Subsidy Calculator, available at http://healthreform.kff.org/subsidycalculator.axpx [8] Ibid. [9] United States National Vital Statistics System. Available at http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/nvss.htm. [10] Health Affairs, Raising the Medicare Eligibility Age: Effects on The Young Elderly, July/August 2003, available at http://content.healthaffairs.org/content/22/4/198.full. [11] Medicare Rights Center, Paying More for Less: Raising the Eligibility Age, available at http://www.medicarerights.org/pdf/Paying-More-For-Less-Raising-Medicare-Age.pdf. [12] ABC News/WashingtonPost Poll, Langer Research Associates, November 2012, available at http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/politics/2012/11/among-cliff-avoidance-options-most-favor-targeting-the-wealthy/. [13] Center for Medicare Advocacy, Deficit Reduction and Medicare: Saving Money without Harming Beneficiaries, available at http://www.medicareadvocacy.org/2012/11/15/deficit-reduction-and-medicare-save-money-without-harming-beneficiaries/ [14] MRC. [15] Center for Medicare Advocacy, Investing in Our Future: Strengthening Medicare in 2012 and Beyond, available at http://www.medicareadvocacy.org/2012/02/09/investing-in-our-future-strengthening-medicare-for-2012-and-beyond/. | |||
Matthew E. Shepard Communications Coordinator Center for Medicare Advocacy, Inc. PO Box 350 Willimantic, CT 06226 mshepard@medicareadvocacy.org (860) 456-7790 (860) 456-2614 (fax) www.medicareadvocacy.org The information in this electronic communication is intended only for the use of the individual(s) or entity named above, and may be legally privileged and confidential under applicable law. If the recipient of this message is not the above-named intended recipient(s), you are hereby notified that any dissemination, copy or disclosure of this communication is strictly prohibited. If you have received this communication in error, please notify the sender above and purge the communication immediately without making any copy or distribution. |
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Saturday, December 8, 2012
Raising the Medicare Eligibility Age: A Costly and Dangerous Proposal
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