November 14, 2003/New York TIMES

The Trojan Horse

By PAUL KRUGMAN

hat are we going to do about Medicare? That should be the subject of an
open national debate. But right now Congressional leaders are trying to
settle the question by stealth, with legislation that purports to be
doing something else.

An aging population and rising medical costs will eventually require the
nation to provide Medicare with more money or to cut benefits, or both.
Meanwhile, there are demands for a new benefit: a gradual shift away
from hospital treatment and toward the use of drugs has turned the
program's failure to cover prescription drugs into a gaping hole.

A Congressional conference is now trying to agree on prescription drug
legislation. But beware of politicians bearing gifts - the bill will
contain measures that have nothing to do with prescription drugs, and a
lot to do with hostility to Medicare as we know it. Indeed, it may turn
out to be a Trojan horse that finally allows conservative ideologues,
who have unsuccessfully laid siege to Medicare since the days of Barry
Goldwater, to breach its political defenses.

Some background: originally, Medicare provided only hospital insurance,
paid for with a special tax on wages - and this tax, according to
estimates from the trustees, will be enough to cover hospital insurance
costs for at least 20 more years. Medicare now also includes additional
benefits, but the costs of these benefits have always been covered out
of general revenue - that is, money raised by other taxes.

But one of the proposals being negotiated behind closed doors -
misleadingly described as "cost containment" - would set a limit on
Medicare's use of general revenue, and would require action seven years
before projections say that limit will be breached. This rule is
reinforced with a peculiar new definition of "general revenue" that
includes interest on the Medicare trust fund, accumulated out of past
payroll taxes. The effect would be to force the government to declare a
Medicare crisis in 2010 or 2011.

You might say it's a good idea to face up to Medicare's problems early.
But the legislation would allow only two responses: either an increase
in the payroll tax (a regressive tax that bears more heavily on
middle-class families than on the wealthy) or benefit cuts. Other
possibilities, like increases in other taxes or other spending cuts,
would be ruled out. In short, this is an attempt to pre-empt discussion
of how we want to deal with Medicare's future and impose a solution
reflecting a particular ideology.

Meanwhile, another proposal - to force Medicare to compete with private
insurers - seems intended to undermine the whole system.

This proposal goes under the name of "premium support." Medicare would
no longer cover whatever medical costs an individual faced; instead,
retirees would receive a lump sum to buy private insurance. (Those who
opted to remain with the traditional system would have to pay extra
premiums.) The ostensible rationale for this change is the claim that
private insurers can provide better, cheaper medical care.

But many studies predict that private insurers would cherry-pick the
best (healthiest) prospects, leaving traditional Medicare with retirees
who are likely to have high medical costs. These higher costs would then
be reflected in the extra payments required to stay in traditional
fee-for-service coverage. The effect would be to put health care out of
reach for many older Americans. As a 2002 study by the Kaiser Family
Foundation judiciously put it, "Difficulties in adjusting for
beneficiary health status . . . could make the traditional Medicare FFS
program unaffordable to a large portion of beneficiaries."

What's going on? Why, bait and switch, of course. Few politicians want
to be seen opposing a bill that finally provides retirees with
prescription drug coverage. That makes a prescription drug bill a
perfect vehicle for smuggling in provisions that sound as if they have
something to do with improving Medicare, yet are actually designed to
undermine it.

Faced with adamant opposition from Democrats who understand exactly
what's going on, like Senator Edward Kennedy, the Republicans are
reported to have retreated a bit. The consequences of the crunch planned
for 2011 will apparently be less drastic, and premium support will be
introduced as an experiment - albeit one involving millions of people -
rather than all at once. But this bill is still a Trojan horse.  

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Jim Devine [EMAIL PROTECTED] &  http://bellarmine.lmu.edu/~jdevine

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