As everyone in Washington knows, there are no savings to be had. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services projects that, at the current trajectory, the Medicare Hospital Trust Fund will become insolvent by 2017. The baby boomers are about to start retiring. Medicare is headed for financial disaster.
President Obama has said as much. He and White House budget director Peter Orszag have repeatedly said that, unless the president’s health-care agenda is enacted, the rising costs of Medicare are going to cripple future budgets and make it impossible for us to control future deficits.
Now the Fantasyland merry-go-round instead goes like this: We need to find savings in Medicare, to fund programs to bring down health-care costs, to bring down the cost of Medicare, which will otherwise make us go broke. . . .
Running the ride in reverse is even more fun: Medicare will make us go broke because of its skyrocketing costs, but we can fix Medicare by overhauling our health-care system, which we can pay for with savings from Medicare, which will otherwise make us go broke because of its skyrocketing costs. . . .
Keep all of this in mind next Wednesday night when the president tacks away from his old claim that we need to pass his agenda in order to make Medicare fiscally solvent, and toward his new claim that we can fund his agenda through Medicare “savings.”
This blog post originally appeared on National Review’s Critical Condition.
Nothing contained in this blog is to be construed as necessarily reflecting the views of the Pacific Research Institute or as an attempt to thwart or aid the passage of any legislation.
Obama in Fantasyland
Jeffrey H. Anderson
This is remarkable.
As everyone in Washington knows, there are no savings to be had. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services projects that, at the current trajectory, the Medicare Hospital Trust Fund will become insolvent by 2017. The baby boomers are about to start retiring. Medicare is headed for financial disaster.
President Obama has said as much. He and White House budget director Peter Orszag have repeatedly said that, unless the president’s health-care agenda is enacted, the rising costs of Medicare are going to cripple future budgets and make it impossible for us to control future deficits.
Now the Fantasyland merry-go-round instead goes like this: We need to find savings in Medicare, to fund programs to bring down health-care costs, to bring down the cost of Medicare, which will otherwise make us go broke. . . .
Running the ride in reverse is even more fun: Medicare will make us go broke because of its skyrocketing costs, but we can fix Medicare by overhauling our health-care system, which we can pay for with savings from Medicare, which will otherwise make us go broke because of its skyrocketing costs. . . .
Keep all of this in mind next Wednesday night when the president tacks away from his old claim that we need to pass his agenda in order to make Medicare fiscally solvent, and toward his new claim that we can fund his agenda through Medicare “savings.”
This blog post originally appeared on National Review’s Critical Condition.
Nothing contained in this blog is to be construed as necessarily reflecting the views of the Pacific Research Institute or as an attempt to thwart or aid the passage of any legislation.