Is Congress trying to expand Medicare-or reform it?
Lawmakers themselves seem unsure, The Washington Post noted in an
Oct. 26 editorial that outlines the differences between House
Republicans and Senate Democrats over the direction of current
Medicare legislation.
"These differences are not minor, narrow or easily resolved," the
newspaper said. "They represent fundamentally different
understandings of what this bill is supposed to be about-whether it
is merely an expansion of Medicare to include prescription drugs or
a much deeper reform of Medicare aimed, among other things, at
making the program cost less over time."
The Post added that it doesn't support a Medicare bill that
neither halts the growth in the program's cost nor reflects the
changes in medicine since 1965, when Medicare began.
The Heritage Foundation agrees. We have provided study after study
that shows how Medicare will become bankrupt in the not-too-distant
future-especially after the 77 million-member baby boom generation
starts retiring in 2011. We also have provided suggestions for
lawmakers on how to offer prescription drugs to seniors without
cleaning out the federal coffers (Hint: just target the seniors who
need the help, not everyone).
Both Heritage and The Post know what the Medicare proposals, now
being worked on by a Capitol Hill committee, should accomplish.
Let's hope lawmakers will know, too.
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.