Many parents dread the question: "Where do babies come from?"
So, too, many lawmakers eager to give birth to a new drug
entitlement for seniors seem just as reluctant to answer the
question: Where will the money come from?
As The New York Times noted in an Aug. 18 article, there's no
budget surplus to tap for the prescription drug benefit to
Medicare, which would add at least $400 billion over 10 years to
Medicare spending. This raises the question: Who will pay for
it?
Leave it to James A. Lebenthal, of the Wall Street bond firm
Lebenthal & Company, to reveal the harsh financial truths: "The
money comes from the public. Not today's public, but the public you
have just sired and that's lying in your bassinet," he told The
Times.
That's something Heritage Foundation health-care analysts have been
saying for months. If lawmakers add a prescription drug benefit to
Medicare as a universal entitlement, the costs on future
generations are almost beyond belief. For example, a baby born
today would, by age 27, pay extra taxes averaging $1,125 per
household. That's on top of other taxes to cover funding shortfalls
totaling trillions that will be needed to maintain future Medicare
and Social Security benefits already promised to 77 million
soon-to-retire baby boomers.
So, where will Medicare drug money come from? If Congress offers
prescription drug coverage to all seniors, the answer is in the
nursery.
For more
information or to receive an e-mail version of "Medicare Maladies,"
contact [email protected]
or call Heritage Media Services at (202) 675-1761.
("Medicare Maladies" is a regular feature, launched 7/14/03, from
The Heritage Foundation. Sad to say, there's another malady coming
your way tomorrow. Daily "maladies" are also available on heritage.org.)