We must end the vicious cycle of third-party payer and rising healthcare costs
By far, our largest unfunded liabilities are Social Security and Medicare. According to recent actuarial reports,
Medicare faces a $25 trillion liability and Social Security has an
unfunded liability of $21 trillion. And those numbers are regarded as
low-ball figures, due to their unrealistic accounting for cost-cutting
measures. They already represent the largest expenditures of the
federal government, with Social Security and Medicare consuming 20.2%
and 14.6% of the budget respectively. Those numbers are slated to
skyrocket as the retirement population doubles over the next three
decades. Hence, any meaningful discussion of balanced budgets must
include a plan to fix these two entitlement behemoths – brought to you
by previous Democrat presidents.
The first step to entitlement
reform must include an acknowledgement of the dichotomy between the two
largest programs. Social Security and Medicare are very different
programs. Consequently, they face divergent problems and require
dissimilar solutions.
Last week, healthcare expert Christopher Conover posted an analysis at the American Enterprise Institute,
illustrating the differences between Social Security and Medicare. He
found that while most people (except low-income earners) receive Social
Security benefits that are roughly commensurate to their contributions
from the 12.4% payroll tax, the same cannot be said of Medicare
benefits. The average Medicare recipient, according to Conover,
received $2-$6 per every dollar paid into the system via the 2.9%
Medicare tax. Moreover, the only people who earn all of their Medicare
benefits are those earning an average of $130,000 a year over their
entire career – the very people who will see a payroll tax increase
under Obamacare.
The
two entitlement programs must be addressed with honest solutions,
albeit with drastically different approaches. Social Security is very
simple. It is not an entitlement program. With the exception of
low-income earners, most people receive less than the aggregate
contributions paid into the system, when the expectation for reasonable
interest returns is factored in. Social Security is a mandatory Ponzi
scheme that offers lousy returns, taxes some of those returns, and
commandeers those returns from the estate of a deceased recipient.
Accordingly,
people who decry attempts to cut Social Security by using the rallying
cry, "it's my money," are absolutely correct. It is their money – and
if they were given an opportunity to invest that money in private
accounts, they would be able to retire comfortably and enjoy a better
rate of return. Thus, a gradual move towards private accounts is the
way to go.
Medicare, as Mr. Conover observes, is a very different
challenge. Not only is Medicare, as it's currently constituted, a
burgeoning budget-busting entitlement program, it is the most prominent
market-distorter amongst the plethora of market distorting programs
Democrats have injected into the healthcare system over the years. This
open-ended third-party program has engendered a self-fulfilling cycle
of unaffordability into the healthcare system. Its very existence has
raised the cost of care to the point that very few people can afford to
retire without it. To that end, unlike with Social Security benefits,
Medicare recipients lack the ability to say (they say it anyway), "give
me my money back, and I'll take care of my own healthcare."
The
bottom line is that the aggregate savings from the 2.9% Medicare payroll
tax and the premiums for retirees are insufficient to pay for today's
healthcare costs – costs that were spiked by the counterintuitive nature
of third-party open-ended payments. This is how liberals have
distorted the costs of healthcare and created dependency over the past
few decades. Whatever is left of free-market healthcare after Medicare,
Medicaid, VA, SChip, and all the mandates on private insurance – will
be decimated by Obamacare.
While the ultimate goal of any Medicare
reform must be the same as Social security reform; less dependency and
empowering individuals, we must first lower healthcare costs by fixing
the entire system. The way to lower direct healthcare costs is through
malpractice reform. The way to lower the cost of health insurance, and
by extension, actual healthcare costs, is by reinstating the free market
into the health insurance industry. That will necessitate reforms that
help peg services and healthcare usage with actual costs.
Being
that Medicare is the biggest driver of healthcare costs, it should be
the biggest priority on the agenda of reformers. Medicare must be
transformed from an unlimited third-party payer system to one that
empowers the individual to buy his/her own insurance with the payroll
tax funds that are commensurate to the cost of the plan. Either a
direct voucher system or Paul Ryan's premium support plan would fit the
bill.
Other reforms should include the following: expansion of tax
free HSAs, removal of anti-free market mandates and one-size-fits-all
mandates on insurance companies, block granting Medicaid to the states
and allowing them to use funds to covert Medicaid and SChip to private
insurance vouchers, converting VA benefits to vouchers for private
insurance (but supplement all extra costs), and eliminating the tax
incentive gap between employer-based insurance and personal insurance.
The last reform would involve either the elimination of the employer tax
exclusion for health insurance, or the extension of that deduction to
individuals who buy health insurance.
All of these reforms will
have the effect of creating downward pressure on healthcare costs, while
concurrently restoring the concept of health insurance to its original
purpose – long-term protection; not a third-party market-distorting
payment system. Only these free-market reforms will lower healthcare
costs to the extent that the payroll taxes would, for the most part,
cover the medical costs of retirees.
In order to achieve these
reforms, the next president will have to eloquently tell the truth about
Medicare to the American people. These free-market reforms will lower
the cost of healthcare for everyone; however, future retirees will have
to pay a reasonable, albeit higher price for their healthcare than they
do under the current system. As long as people are misled to believe
that they pay for every cent of the current Medicare system, such
reforms are untenable. The next generation of retirees must understand
that they are paying less than 50% of their Medicare benefits, a reality
that is unsustainable. They must come to realize that nothing in life
is free, certainly not the best healthcare system in the world. We all
know those people who complain about paying even a $20 co-pay for
medical care, while blithely shelling out hundreds of dollars for car
repairs. If we continue to seek the best healthcare for free, we will
become free of the best healthcare system in the world. We simply don't
have the money.
While it is impossible to continue a system in
which we enjoy the best healthcare for free, the next best option is a
system that is reasonably affordable. There is only one panacea for our
healthcare ailments; free-market reform – along with veracious leaders
to champion the prescription.
Cross-posted to RedState.com
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