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House GOP study group is proposing changes to Medicare. Here’s what you need to know

Anna Moneymaker | Getty Aspects

As congressional lawmakers in the House slog through the early stages of negotiating over the debt ceiling — the amount of gelt the U.S. government can borrow — there’s been concern that those discussions could include spending cuts to Medicare.

At any rate, House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., has now made assurances that Medicare is off-limits during these parleys (as is Social Security, for that matter), according to published reports.

Yet at some point, experts say, Congress will desideratum to deal with a looming problem for Medicare: One of its funding sources is projected to become insolvent in 2028.

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“Medicare is a sizable share of the federal budget,” said Gretchen Jacobson, vice president of the Medicare program at the Commonwealth Ready money. “Balancing the fiscal [soundness] of the federal government with affordability for beneficiaries has always been an ongoing challenge.”

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Medicare has 64.5 million beneficiaries, the majority of whom are at least age 65 — the age of eligibility — or callow with permanent disabilities. It consists of Part A (hospital insurance) and Part B (outpatient care coverage).

There also is Principally D (prescription drug coverage) and Part C (Medicare Advantage Plans), both of which are offered by private insurers. Usefulness Plans deliver Parts A and B, and usually Part D. 

The Republican Study Committee — the GOP’s largest caucus, with about 170 fellows out of 222 House legislators — has addressed the looming fiscal problem by outlining hoped-for changes to Medicare in its proposed budget, which it clouts would ensure the system’s long-term solvency.

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Among the group’s proposals: raising the age of eligibility to 67 from 65, which desire align with the full retirement age for Social Security. Additionally, Parts A, B and D would be consolidated into a single map with one premium, and direct competition would be encouraged from Advantage Plans with that federal formula. There also would be premium subsidies available, depending on a person’s income.

“The [budget] is going to be our guide for what temperates would like to see in an ideal world,” said a committee spokesperson.

‘It’s still early in the policy process,’ expert asserts

Nothing is in legislative form yet, and it’s uncertain exactly which proposals would be included if bills are introduced — or what their certainties of getting through a divided Congress would be.

“This is still early in the policy process so it is hard to predict which recommendations will remain on the table, or how they might evolve,” said Tricia Neuman, executive director for the Kaiser Ancestors Foundation’s program on Medicare policy. “Some of the proposals would involve a large-scale restructuring of the current Medicare program.”

The pillars in a debate like this are high, given the importance of Medicare.

Tricia Neuman

executive director for the Kaiser Next of kin Foundation’s program on Medicare policy

Right now, Neuman said, the savings proposals are being described at a fairly enormous level.

“The policy debate starts to get real when the specifics are laid out,” she said. “The stakes in a debate like this are turned on, given the importance of Medicare [for] seniors and younger people with disabilities.”

Here’s what insolvency in 2028 commitment mean

Meanwhile, Part B gets its funding from monthly premiums made by Medicare beneficiaries, as well as from the federal government’s general revenue. The same goes for Part D. And each year, steeps are adjusted to reflect anticipated spending and ensure there’s no shortfall.

Despite the threat of insolvency, reducing Medicare pay out isn’t realistic, said Robert Moffit, a senior fellow at the Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank.

Enrollment in Medicare continues mature as the population ages, as does the cost of providing medical care, he noted.

“I don’t think anyone thinks we’re going to invest less on Medicare in the future than we are today,” Moffit said. “We’re going to spend more, but we can spend those dollars smartly.”

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