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Debunking Medicare Mythology Print E-mail
SciMed - Healthcare
TS-Si News Service   
Monday, 13 August 2012 09:00
The Rod of Asclepius.Champaign, IL, USA. Misconceptions about the viability of Medicare can be debunked or discredited, says Law Professor Richard L. Kaplanan, an expert on retirement benefits.

Medicare has become one of the most controversial federal programs for numerous reasons, but misinformation has played a key role in fostering criticism of it, says Kaplan. He argues it us more important than ever for voters and policymakers to fully understand the program’s existing contours and limitations.


Kaplan’s paper, Top Ten Myths of Medicare, appears in The Elder Law Journal. “Medicare is an important and complicated program that has no counterpart in the American health care system, and its significance to Americans of all ages is impossible to overstate,” said Kaplan. “At the same time, its very size, cost and complexity make it a natural target for serious reform and cost reduction. Therefore, Medicare has become a lightning rod simply because it is eating up more federal resources every year.”

Richard L. Kaplan, Photo by L. Brian Stauffer, University of Illinois.

Richard L. Kaplan, the Peer and Sarah Pedersen Professor of Law at the University of Illinois.

Photo courtesy of L. Brian Stauffer, University of Illinois.
Among the myths that have sprouted, perhaps the most popular one is that Medicare is going bankrupt, Kaplan says. “Medicare consists of several distinct components with differing mechanisms for financing its costs,” he said. “Medicare Parts B and D are financed by premiums paid by current-year enrollees and general tax revenues.

These funds are generated in the current fiscal year.” As long as the federal government receives tax revenues from any source and there are any enrollees in Medicare Parts B and D, those two programs can be funded, Kaplan says.

Medicare Part A, however, is a very different arrangement, because it collects payroll taxes paid by current workers and funnels those taxes to a “trust fund” that pays for its expenditures, Kaplan says.

“But money is fungible, and the federal government can spend whatever sums it wishes on whatever programs it deems worthy of funding,” he said. “After all, there is no ‘trust fund’ for the Defense Department, but the lack of a dedicated funding source has not prevented paying for wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.”

Another myth is that Medicare is not “means-tested” – that is, higher-income beneficiaries don’t pay more than lower-income beneficiaries for the same benefits.

Medicare Part A has been means-tested from the very beginning, because a payroll tax necessarily means that you pay more if you earn more,” Kaplan said. “Since 2006, under legislation signed by President Bush, enrollees above a certain income threshold pay higher premiums for their Medicare Part B coverage, and a provision of the Affordable Care Act extends that treatment to Medicare Part D, the prescription drug program.

“One can argue that wealthy people should pay still more, but the point is that we already have means-testing in Medicare.”

Another popular myth is that Medicare is politically untouchable. Not true, says Kaplan. “Both Democrats and Republicans have reduced Medicare’s budget in virtually every budget cycle for the last 20 years, mostly on the providers’ side, by reducing the amount Medicare pays to hospitals, nursing homes, home health care agencies, pharmacies and the like,” he said. “In fact, half of the financing for the Affordable Care Act comes from cuts to Medicare’s budget.”

Such budget cuts, however, are not painless to beneficiaries, Kaplan says. “If health care providers decide that they are not going to take any new Medicare patients, there may be serious access issues,” he said. “We’ve seen that happen already with Medicaid, and it might soon happen with Medicare.”

As the baby boomer generation becomes direct beneficiaries as program enrollees, Kaplan says it is essential that would-be reformers undertake an informed discussion and analysis of proposals to control the future cost of Medicare. “Only if the many myths that surround this program are debunked can the difficult decisions and inevitable policy trade-offs be developed that will maintain the program’s singular importance for older Americans,” he said.

CitationTop Ten Myths of Medicare. Richard L. Kaplan. The Elder Law Journal 2012; Illinois Program in Law, Behavior and Social Science Paper No. LBSS13-02; Illinois Public Law Research Paper No. 11-28.

Abstract

In the context of changing demographics, the increasing cost of health care services, and continuing federal budgetary pressures, Medicare has become one of the most controversial federal programs. To facilitate an informed debate about the future of this important public initiative, this article examines and debunks the following ten myths surrounding Medicare: (1) there is one Medicare program, (2) Medicare is going bankrupt, (3) Medicare is government health care, (4) Medicare covers all medical cost for its beneficiaries, (5) Medicare pays for long-term care expenses, (6) the program is immune to budgetary reduction, (7) it wastes much of its money on futile care, (8) Medicare is less efficient than private health insurance, (9) Medicare is not means-tested, and (10) increased longevity will sink Medicare.

Keywords: medicare, long-term care, taxes, longevity.

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Last Updated on Monday, 13 August 2012 10:05
 

Comments   

 
# RE: Debunking Medicare MythologyPamela 2012-08-13 20:56
Sure, another "Trust Fund" just like Social Security that is FULL of government IOU's while the actual cash has long been spent. Even with all the moneys collected, as MORE of the baby boomers retire, there will be a higher demand on the care for ALL parts of Medicare. The lawyer's argument about it being "Means Tested" is pure nonsense. This guy should stick to law and leave economics to those that know about such things.
I've read on the subject from more knowledgeable authors and they don't agree with this guy. I'd place him in the liberal camp and rate his claims as propaganda.
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