The new Congress must stop irresponsible federal spending. This applies to replacing the Medicare Sustainable Growth Rate (SGR) formula that annually updates Medicare physician payment with a workable alternative.
In 2014, House and Senate negotiators, representing three major congressional committees, worked long and hard to hammer out a compromise SGR replacement bill. While the bill is an improvement over the Medicare status quo, it fails to restore physicians’ professional independence and patients’ personal freedom[1] and neglects to offset the very large costs that will accompany any change. On April 1, 2015, Medicare physicians face a 21 percent pay cut under the SGR formula. The new Congress must revisit this issue, including the financing question.
No Deficits
Replacing the current SGR with a more rational Medicare physician payment system will increase Medicare spending. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimates that the cost of the policy embodied in the compromise bill would be $144 billion over 10 years. If Congress were to base payment updates on medical inflation, it would cost $204 billion over the initial decade of implementation.[2]
Congress has a profound obligation to make sure that any permanent Medicare SGR fix is accompanied by permanent, not temporary savings. The most effective approach is to make structural reforms that will offset SGR replacement costs while simultaneously improving the Medicare program’s overall financial condition.
Four Bipartisan Options to Secure Major Medicare Savings
There are at least four major structural changes that have attracted bipartisan support and would improve the functioning of the program and guarantee permanent savings in the future. These reforms are: benefit modernization, means-testing expansion, increasing eligibility age, and new competitive bidding in Medicare Advantage. While all differ in detail, these policy changes have all received bipartisan support at one time or another in Congress or have been endorsed by health policy analysts at both liberal and conservative public policy institutions.
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Modernize the traditional Medicare benefit structure.[3] This can be done by combining Medicare Parts A (hospital payment) and B (physicians’ payment) into one program with a single premium and deductible and a uniform cost-sharing system. At the same time, Congress should rearrange the relationship between Medigap or supplemental coverage and traditional Medicare to limit supplemental coverage of “first-dollar” coverage. This would reduce excessive utilization among beneficiaries that drives up Medicare costs and adds to premium costs for both taxpayers and beneficiaries. Such a structural change should also add protection from catastrophic costs for seniors, which traditional Medicare does not currently provide.
Estimated Savings: The CBO estimates that these reforms would secure $114 billion in savings from 2014 to 2023.[4]
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Update the age of Medicare eligibility.[5] Medicare’s eligibility age, 65, was set in 1965 and based on the Social Security eligibility age that was set in 1935. In contrast to Medicare, Congress has already undertaken the process of raising the normal retirement age for Social Security to 67. Beneficiaries are living much longer now than they were in 1965. As the baby-boom generation enters Medicare, the ratio of workers to retirees is steadily shrinking, and Medicare’s financing issues continue to worsen. At the very least, Congress should increase Medicare’s age of eligibility to 67, matching the change made to Social Security eligibility.
Ideally, Congress should go further and gradually raise the age of eligibility for both Social Security and Medicare to 68 and then index the normal age of eligibility for both programs to life expectancy. This simple recognition of America’s new demographic realities is sound policy and would secure permanent Medicare savings.
Estimated Savings: The CBO estimates that an increase in the age of Medicare eligibility to 67 would yield savings of $63.5 billion from 2014 to 2023.[6]
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Reduce taxpayer subsidies for wealthy Medicare recipients.[7] Today, individuals with an annual income of $85,000 or couples with an annual income of $170,000 pay higher premiums for Medicare Part B (outpatient and physicians’ services) and Medicare Part D (prescription drug coverage). In other words, about 5 percent of the Medicare population receives less in taxpayer subsidies for their benefits than all other Medicare recipients.
Today’s upper-income thresholds for Medicare premium increases are very high, and will be indexed to inflation beginning in 2020. There is an emerging bipartisan consensus that taxpayers’ subsidies should be reduced for the wealthiest Medicare recipients and that upper-income recipients should be required to pay more for their health benefits, though there remain differences on where the income threshold should be set.[8] Depending on the design of the reform, such a policy change could result in significant, and permanent, Medicare savings.
Estimated Savings: The Heritage Foundation’s proposal to expand Medicare’s upper-income “means testing” would yield an estimated savings of $538 billion from 2016 to 2025.[9]
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Use market-based bidding for Medicare Advantage payment.[10] Medicare Advantage (MA), a program where private plans provide the Medicare benefit to beneficiaries, is the only competitor to traditional Medicare. MA has experienced rapid growth in enrollment over the past decade, with about 30 percent of all Medicare beneficiaries enrolled in MA in 2014. However, the program payment system is flawed. The private plans’ bid to provide traditional Medicare coverage is tied to the administrative payment of the Medicare fee-for-service (FFS) system.[11] Thus, MA’s payment reflects FFS’s administrative payment instead of a real market price to provide Medicare’s traditional benefits. As a result, the payment system results in unnecessary Medicare spending. In 2014, MA plans were paid an average of 6 percent more than traditional Medicare despite the average plan bid costing 2 percent less than traditional Medicare.[12] In reforming the payment system, Congress should detach MA plan payment from traditional Medicare spending. Instead, the new benchmark MA payment should be based on the average bid of all plans competing in a given geographic region.
Estimated Savings: This proposal has yet to be scored by the CBO. However, in President Obama’s fiscal year 2010 budget, the same change to the MA benchmark payment was estimated to save $175 billion over ten years.[13] Though the MA program has undergone some significant changes because of the Affordable Care Act, it nonetheless stands to reason that this change would still produce significant savings.
SGR Replacement Should Be Done Right
In funding an SGR replacement, Congress should avoid budgetary tricks or gimmicks, such as tapping “war savings” from the projected reductions in Overseas Contingency Operations (OCO) or changing the effective dates of certain spending provisions from one fiscal year to the next. Congress should also reject any proposal to pay for changes in Medicare provider payments that relies on tightening up Medicare price controls or manipulating administrative payments.
Permanently replacing the SGR is a bipartisan priority, but the change should be fully funded and not add to the nation’s deficits. The most productive and fiscally responsible approach to financing a replacement of the SGR is to make structural changes that enhance Medicare’s financial condition and improve its efficiency and effectiveness and that can attract broad bipartisan support.
—Robert E. Moffit, PhD, is Senior Fellow in the Center for Health Policy Studies, of the Institute for Family, Community, and Opportunity, at The Heritage Foundation. Alyene Senger is a Research Associate in the Center for Health Policy Studies.