But with health care costs projected to rise another three percent, these reductions couldn’t come at a worse time.
When President Obama signed the Affordable Care Act into law, he simultaneously authorized $200 billion in cuts to the Medicare Advantage program. At the time, the Congressional Budget Office projected that the health care reform law’s cuts would result in three million fewer Medicare Advantage enrollees. Moreover, actuaries at Oliver Wyman predicted that the cost of the health insurance tax would mean an additional $3,500 in out-of-pocket expenses for seniors over the next ten years.
If all that weren’t bad enough, a few weeks ago the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) proposed an additional 2.3 percent reduction in Medicare Advantage payments for 2014. This new reduction, combined with the cuts in the health care law, mean Medicare Advantage payments next year will go down by more than eight percent, or about $11 billion.
Oliver Wyman calculates the impact in 2014 will be $50 to $90 per month in some combination of benefit cuts and premium increases per senior participant. As the full effect of the mandated ObamaCare cuts become fully implemented, the impact worsens significantly.
It’s time for seniors to stand up and say enough is enough.
Medicare Advantage is the one program
that allows seniors to choose a plan that offers coverage through a
private company rather than a government agency. Much to the chagrin of
the Obama Administration, 28 percent of all Medicare beneficiaries - 14
million – rely on Medicare Advantage.
Participation among minority groups is
even higher: 31 percent for African-Americans, 38 percent for Hispanics.
Forty-one percent of all beneficiaries have incomes of $20,000 or less.
However, 61 percent of minority beneficiaries are in that low income
group. Bad as it is for everyone, the CMS’ proposed cuts to Medicare
Advantage will disproportionately affect minority, low-income senior
citizens.
The combined impact of these
administrative actions will force millions of seniors into the
government run Medicare they already chose to reject. According to the
CMS’ own numbers, enrollment in Medicare Advantage fell for several
years after the program was faced with significant cuts in the Balanced
Budget Act of 1997. And between December 2001 and December 2002,
enrollment dropped by more than 900,000. Those who stayed in the program
saw higher premiums and reduced benefits and coverage.
And, what of those in the low-income
category? They’ll be shouldering the brunt of the higher premiums.
According to Oliver Wyman, “those who utilize services the most will be
required to pay even higher cost sharing or be forced by higher MA
premiums or loss of access to MA plans to move back into FFS Medicare…”
Furthermore, according to 2010 analysis
by the Heritage Foundation’s Robert A. Book, Ph.D. and James Capretta,
the grisly truth is that the reform law’s cuts in payments to Medicare
Advantage and the subsequent premium hikes and reduced benefits will
only drive would-be Medicare Advantage enrollees into a government- run
Medicare program. The net effect is that spending is only transferred
from one program to the other; it’s not reduced.
So why not fund Medicare Advantage and
allow the millions of seniors, particularly low income and minority
seniors, to keep the coverage they already have?
Barack Obama repeatedly pledged, "If you
like your health care plan, you can keep it. If you like your doctor,
you can keep your doctor." But, the war he is waging against Medicare
Advantage will give lie to both of those promises.
It’s time for Washington to stop playing
politics with seniors’ medical care and continue to allow private
companies to compete in the Medicare marketplace. Simply forcing more
and more Americans to become dependent on the federal government is no
way to go about real reform. The Obama Administration can, and should,
stop these cuts before it’s too late.
http://finance.townhall.com/columnists/bobbeauprez/2013/03/23/obama-cuts-medicare--again-n1546946/page/full/
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