TPM
Converting Medicare into a voucher program modeled on the plan Mitt
Romney and Paul Ryan have proposed would increase premiums for the
majority of seniors, even ones who choose to remain in traditional
Medicare, according to a comprehensive nonpartisan study (PDF) released Monday.
The Kaiser Family Foundation delved into the likely impact of
transforming Medicare into a “premium support” system. Under that
approach, the federal government would provide seniors a subsidy to shop
for insurance plans from a menu of competing private plans and
traditional Medicare. That subsidy would be capped at the value of the
second least costly premium in the marketplace.
Using 2010 data as a model, Kaiser’s study found that among seniors who chose to remain
in traditional Medicare, more than half would have paid higher
premiums. Just under half would have paid the same. That would’ve
yielded an average premium hike of $720 annually for seniors who chose
to remain in traditional Medicare.
Among seniors with private Medicare Advantage plans, 88 percent would
have paid higher premiums unless they switched to a cheaper plan with
less generous benefits. On average, seniors already in private plans
would have paid $1,044 more annually, according to the study.
Taken together, 59 percent of Medicare beneficiaries would have ended
up paying higher premiums than they do in the current system if they
remained in their current plan.
The caveats: the report makes clear that it’s not a perfect analysis
of the Romney-Ryan plan. That’s in part because the Romney-Ryan would
take effect in 2023, whereas Kaiser’s report studies the impact of such a
plan taking effect in 2010. It’s also because Romney and Ryan haven’t
provided enough details to conduct a truly thoroughgoing analysis.
The Romney campaign quickly moved to dismiss the significance of the study.
“As the authors stress, this is not a study of the Romney-Ryan plan,”
Romney spokeswoman Andrea Saul told TPM. “Our plan would always provide
future beneficiaries guaranteed coverage options with no increase in
out-of-pocket costs from today’s Medicare.”
The study nevertheless concludes that, taking a broadly similar
approach, the majority of seniors would have paid higher premiums in
2010 than they did under Medicare in its existing form.
Kaiser used Medicare Advantage bids for the year 2010 as proxies for private plan bids under a premium support system.
The study found that if one in four seniors responded to the
programmatic changes by switching into cheaper plans the share that face
higher premiums would fall from 59 percent to 35 percent.
Costs would vary considerably across regions, as would the share of
seniors subjected to higher premiums — populous states would be most
affected, with seniors in Florida taking the greatest hit, the Kaiser
study found.
Two final key caveats: First, the Kaiser study does not project the
longer-term implications for traditional Medicare. Many analysts warn
that over time, sicker and older patients would choose traditional
Medicare over private plans as private insurers tailored their plans to
younger, healthier beneficiaries. Without strict rules and adequate risk
adjustment, this would put traditional Medicare premiums on a “death
spiral” and the public plan would collapse.
Second, the Kaiser study looks at a single year, and does not model
the impact of a Medicare spending cap. That’s not necessarily the case
under the Ryan plan, which limits premium growth at GDP plus 0.5 percent
a year. In other words, if the second-cheapest bid in any region
exceeds that in a given year, the voucher would be limited to GDP + 0.5,
likely leaving seniors to pay the difference on their own.
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