It got older, that's what. Medicare is 38 today-not quite
middle-aged, but around long enough to need changes to keep up with
the times.
Medicare began on July 30, 1965, as a noble effort to help retirees
get better health care at affordable costs. "No longer will illness
crush and destroy the savings they have so carefully put away over
a lifetime so that they might enjoy dignity in their later years,"
President Lyndon B. Johnson said when he signed Medicare into
law.
But LBJ is long gone. College students in his day are now almost
eligible for Medicare. However, as they aged, Congress did little
to change how the program is run-except to cut payments to doctors,
and the recent clumsy attempt to add prescription drugs as an
entitlement.
That attempt is a doozy: With 77 million aging baby boomers
entering the program soon, Medicare's cost to future generations is
almost beyond belief. A Medicare drug entitlement alone will cost
$2 trillion through 2030, with increasing costs thereafter,
according to Heritage Foundation research. To put it another way,
babies born today would, by age 27, pay extra taxes averaging
$1,125 per household. That's on top of Medicare's payroll taxes and
other taxes needed to cover future shortfalls in Social Security
and Medicare itself.
That means in the 21st century, illness won't "crush and destroy"
the savings and dignity of many people. Without real reform, it
will be the Medicare drug entitlement itself.
Read more of Heritage's Medicare research at heritage.org.
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.
Report Health Care Reform
Medicare Malady #13: Whatever Happened to the Medicare of 1965?
July 30, 2003 1 min read
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