[A pretty good column...]

March 26, 2004/New York TIMES

OP-ED COLUMNIST
The Medicare Muddle
By PAUL KRUGMAN

In advance of Tuesday's reports by the Social Security and Medicare
trustees, some credulous journalists wrote stories based on tips from
advocates of Social Security privatization, who claimed that the report
would offer a radically downgraded vision of the system's future. False
alarm: projections for Social Security are about the same as last year.
Projections for Medicare, however, have worsened: last year the trustees
predicted that the hospital insurance trust fund would last until 2026,
and now they've moved it back to 2019.

How should we react to this news?

It has become standard practice among privatizers to talk as if there is
some program called Socialsecurityandmedicare. They hope to use scary
numbers about future medical costs to panic us into abandoning a
retirement program that's actually in pretty good shape. But the
deteriorated outlook for Medicare says nothing, one way or another,
about either the sustainability of Social Security (no problem) or the
desirability of private retirement accounts (a lousy idea.)

Even on Medicare, don't panic. It's not like a private health plan that
will go belly up when it runs out of money; it's just a government
program, albeit one supported by a dedicated tax. Nobody thinks
America's highways will be doomed if the gasoline tax, which currently
pays for highway maintenance, falls short of the system's needs - if
politicians want to sustain the system, they will. The same is true of
Medicare. Rising medical costs are a very big budget issue, but 2019
isn't a drop-dead date.

The trustees' report does, however, give one more reason to hate the
prescription drug bill the administration rammed through Congress last
year. If deception, intimidation, abuse of power and giveaways to drug
companies aren't enough, it turns out that the bill also squanders
taxpayer money on H.M.O.'s.

A little background: conservatives have never mounted an attack on
Medicare as systematic as their effort to bully the public into
privatizing Social Security. They do, however, often talk about Medicare
"reform." What this amounts to, in practice, is a drive to replace the
traditional system, in which Medicare pays doctors and hospitals
directly, with a system in which Medicare subcontracts that role to
private H.M.O.'s.

In 1997 Congress tried to take a big step in that direction, requiring
Medicare to pay per-person fees to private health plans that accepted
Medicare recipients. There was much talk about the magic of the
marketplace: private plans, so the theory went, would be far more
efficient than government bureaucrats, offering better health care at
lower cost.

What actually happened was that private plans skimmed the cream,
accepting only relatively healthy retirees. Yet Medicare paid them
slightly more per retiree than it spent on traditional benefits. In
other words, instead of saving money by subcontracting its role to
private plans, Medicare was in effect required to pay H.M.O.'s a hefty
subsidy.

The only thing that kept this "reform" from being a fiscal disaster was
the fact that after an initial rush into the Medicare business, many
H.M.O.'s pulled out again. It turns out that private plans are much less
efficient than the government at providing health insurance because they
have much higher overhead. Even with a heavy subsidy, they can't compete
with traditional Medicare.

There's a lesson in this experience. Sometimes there's no magic in the
free market - in fact, it can be a hindrance. Health insurance is one
place where government agencies consistently do a better job than
private companies. I'll have more to say about this when I write about
the general issue of health care reform (soon, I promise!).

But whether because of ideology or because of H.M.O. campaign
contributions, the people now running the country refuse to learn that
lesson. As part of last year's prescription drug bill, they tried again,
offering an even bigger subsidy to private plans.

And that turns out to be an important reason for the deterioration in
Medicare's prospects: of the seven years lopped off the life of the
trust fund, two are the result of increased subsidies mandated by last
year's law, mainly in the form of higher payments to H.M.O.'s.

So what did we learn this week? Social Security is in decent shape.
Medicare has problems, but ill-conceived "reform" has only made those
problems worse. And let's rip up that awful prescription drug bill and
start over. 

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

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