Digby reacts with horror at so-called liberal Democrats who are in favor of Obama’s plan to raise the Medicare eligibility age to 67, a disastrous idea that would ultimately lead to higher health costs for people of all ages.
A Kaiser Foundation study concluded that “raising Medicare’s eligibility to 67 in 2014 would generate an estimated $5.7 billion in net savings to the federal government, but also result in an estimated net increase of $3.7 billion in out-of-pocket costs for 65-and 66-year-olds, and $4.5 billion in employer retiree health-care costs.”
So it would save $5.7 billion from the Federal budget in the first year, but it would cost everyone else $8.2 billion. That means it would increase health care costs by $2.5 billion. (We do the math so you don’t have to.) Who would benefit from a lower Federal deficit? High earners who want to cut spending so they’re not pressured to pay more taxes. Who would get hurt? Older Americans, employers, and anybody on an employee benefit plan. That’s government of the rich, for the rich, and by the rich.
by Brian Beutler, TPM
As long as self-anointed fact-checkers are dumping on Democrats for claiming the GOP plan to phase out Medicare and replace it with a private insurance system “ends” the program altogether, they might as well fact check the obverse claim. Specifically, the GOP’s argument that their plan “saves” Medicare and provides seniors coverage “just like” the insurance members of Congress have.
The Washington Post’s Glenn Kessler took on the task and concluded,
“We think the reference to the health plan for members of Congress gives a false and misleading impression to ordinary people.”
He gives the claim “Two Pinocchios.”
Like other employers who provide health care to their employees, the federal government agrees to pick up a fixed percentage of their employees’ premiums, no matter how quickly they grow. The GOP’s Medicare plan, by contrast, would provide seniors a fixed amount, pegged to regular old inflation, which means over time, a larger and larger chunk of their already-expensive premiums will fall on them.
“Indeed, the main reason for making the proposal is to help bring down health-care costs for the federal government and thus get a handle on the deficit,” Kessler wrote. “The CBO suggests this will be accomplished largely by shifting the costs onto beneficiaries