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Published byMyron Burns Modified over 9 years ago
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Natalie Brisighella
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1.Current System 2.Proposed Plan Details 3.Negative Consequences of Plan 4.Additional Arguments 5.Refutation of Proponents’ Arguments 6.Questions ROADMAP
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Medicaid: 50 million low income and severely disabled beneficiaries. Medicare: 47 million retirees and disabled beneficiaries. CURRENT SYSTEM
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Eligibility age for Medicare would gradually increase beginning in 2022 from 65-67 ending in 2033 Implements a “premium support payment” plan Sets up a “block grant” system to shift Medicaid funding to the states Changes regulations of private insurance plans Repeals several key provisions of the Affordable Care Act DETAILS OF THE RYAN PLAN
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New enrollees after 2022 will receive “premium support payments” to purchase private insurance Premium support payments go directly from the government to the private insurance companies Average 65 year old would receive an $8,000 voucher Premium payments increase every year to accommodate decreasing health, increasing age, and increasing inflation PREMIUM SUPPORT PAYMENTS
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Payments vary depending upon health status, age of beneficiary and income: Wealthiest 2% receives 30% of the payment 6% receives 50% of the payment Remaining 92% receive the “full premium” This tiered system results in higher premiums for the top two brackets. PREMIUM SUPPORT PAYMENTS
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Beginning in 2013 the federal share of Medicaid payments get turned into “block grants” which are given to the states Block grants are lump sums of money given to the states to run their Medicaid programs Block grants will increase annually with population growth and inflation until they’re ultimately decreased in 2022 to exclude projected spending for acute care services for elderly Medicare beneficiaries BLOCK GRANTS FOR MEDICAID
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HARMS OF THE RYAN PLAN Increased Costs to Seniors
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The total cost of providing health care benefits (premium and other costs) to a typical 65-year old in a private plan would be about $20,500 in 2022. The government would contribute $8,000 or 39 percent toward the total cost, and the remaining $12,500 would be paid by the beneficiary. The CBO projects that out-of-pocket costs for the typical 65-year old would be more than twice as large under the proposal than under traditional Medicare ($5,630) in 2022. INCREASED COSTS
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The Ryan plan forces future beneficiaries out of the traditional Medicare plan into a more expensive private plan. In 2022 65-year-olds would be forced to pay twice as much for care than they would under Medicare: $12,500 compared to $6,150. The same holds true for 65-year-olds in 2030. They would be forced to pay $20,713 compared to $9,138 under Medicare. INCREASED COSTS: EXPENSIVE PRIVATE PLANS
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Anyone who wanted to buy coverage that costs more than the credit would have to pay the difference themselves. The expectation is that people would buy less expensive coverage and more often pay for routine expenses out-of-pocket. INCREASED COSTS: LARGER OUT-OF-POCKET COSTS
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The House Republican plan forces seniors to pay a larger share of their health costs over time since the value of the voucher increases at a slower rate than medical costs. The Ryan proposal calls for 65-year-olds to contribute $12,513 of the estimated $20,513 total cost of their health care in 2022, including premiums and out-of-pocket expenses, or 61 percent. They are expected to pay $20,713 of the $30,460 in total costs in 2030, or 68 percent. INCREASED COSTS: LARGER OUT-OF-POCKET COSTS
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The proposal claims that current Medicare beneficiaries with low incomes will be guaranteed access to traditional Medicare with no additional premiums. That's fine as far as it goes, but it doesn't apply to new beneficiaries. And it doesn't apply to anyone whose income is greater than 135 percent of the federal poverty threshold. Thus, elderly or disabled individuals with incomes as low as $15,000 or couples with incomes as low as $20,000 could face increased premiums. INCREASED COSTS: LARGER PREMIUMS FOR ELDERLY AND IMPOVERISHED
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By 2030, the government would spend $7,200 on a 65-year-old in traditional Medicare. Since the cost of Ryan’s plan remains fixed at $6,600, it would save the government $600. But the total cost of insuring the beneficiary through the private sector would be $20,600, compared to $12,400 under traditional Medicare. For every dollar that the government would save on this beneficiary, it would generate more than $13 of waste. Congressional Budget Office & Center for American Progress INCREASED COSTS: WASTEFUL SPENDING
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HARMS OF RYAN PLAN Decrease in Coverage
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By 2033, the Ryan plan fails to cover anyone between the ages of 65 and 67. While the Ryan plan would cover less than 30 percent of the cost of a 67-year-old’s private health insurance, it would cover none of that of the 65-year-old. By gradually denying coverage to people up to age 67 and shifting costs off to those it would continue to cover, the Ryan plan saves the government $4.9 trillion from 2022 to 2084 – about the size of the Social Security shortfall over the same period. On the other hand, the private coverage is so expensive that the total cost is $34 trillion more than what would be paid under traditional Medicare. Seniors would be required to pay $39 trillion more under the Ryan plan – more than seven times the Social Security shortfall. Center for American Progress DECREASE IN COVERAGE
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14-27 million Medicaid enrollees would lose coverage if Medicaid is block-granted. The premise hinges on a plan requiring “responsibility”, and “Ryan’s ‘responsible’ plan for reducing the deficit rests on massive cuts in healthcare for lower-income Americans while simultaneously reducing taxes for the wealthy. The CBO has estimated that 30-48 million people would lose health care coverage under the Ryan Plan. DECREASE IN COVERAGE: BLOCK GRANTS
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HARMS OF RYAN PLAN Harms to States and Federal Government
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The Ryan Plan would substantially reduce federal payments to states, challenging states’ ability to finance coverage for their low-income residents. This reduction could result in large reductions in payments to providers and enrollment. In turn, these reductions would likely worsen the problem of the uninsured and strain the nation’s safety net. To avoid such cuts, states would need to increase their own spending. HARMS TO THE STATES
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Rolling back the ACA would increase federal budget deficits by $230 billion by 2021 HARMS TO FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
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ADDITIONAL ARGUMENTS
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The difference between Medicare and private insurance is not just in the level of spending, but also in rates of growth. Historically, Medicare per capita spending has grown a bit slower than the private sector's. But when Medicare is serious about containing costs—as demonstrated by the Affordable Care Act—the difference really shows. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) finds that Medicare premiums, currently estimated to be 11 percent lower than private insurance premiums for the same benefit package, will be about 30 percent lower by the end of the next decade. MEDICARE COSTS GROW SLOWER THAN PRIVATE PLANS
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Ryan Plan: The amount of money in a voucher increases with inflation. Problem: Medical costs increase at a much faster rate; the voucher system could not keep up with the rate of increase for medical costs. Thus leading to an overall increase in cost. Ex: “When the program begins in 2022, the typical 65-year old would be responsible for about 25% of the cost of their healthcare, which is consistent with Medicare as it exists today. However, the share paid out-of-pocket by this typical 65-year-old in 2030 would be 68% under the Republican plan.” This both increases costs and risk for beneficiaries. Congressional Budget Office & Kaiser Family Foundation VOUCHER SYSTEM
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70% of Americans prefer to keep Medicare as it is today 25% want the program changed to a “premium support” system. 83% of democrats, 71% of independents, and 53% of republicans also prefer to maintain the current Medicare system, rather than adopting a new “premium support” system Kaiser Family Foundation, Kaiser Heath Tracking Poll — February 2012 Americans don’t approve of the Ryan plan
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“Rep. Ryan claims that under his plan seniors will be enrolled in the same plan members of Congress and federal employees receive. This is not accurate. Federal employees receive a “consistent level” of contributions to health costs. Under Rep. Ryan’s plan the government voucher would not keep pace with increases in medical costs, meaning seniors would be forced to pay more of the cost.” Center For American Progress & Office of Personnel Management 2011 NOT THE SAME AS FEDERAL PLAN
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ADDITIONAL REFUTATIONS
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Questions?
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