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Politics

Will Medicare Bankrupt the U.S.?

Peter Suderman | 10.26.2010 4:56 PM

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In a lengthy, excellent piece over at the Center for Public Integrity, David Nather says that, the way things are going, it just might:

With its one-two punch of rising health care costs and more seniors to cover, Medicare will eat up more and more of the federal budget in the years ahead. But it's also politically untouchable. When either Democrats or Republicans try to suggest ways to trim the costs, they're accused of trying to push Grandma down the stairs in her wheelchair. Republicans did it to the Democrats during the debate over the new health care law, and Democrats are doing it now, at the height of election season, as Republicans float their own proposals.

Medicare is already growing faster than Social Security, and it could become bigger and more expensive than Social Security in the next 25 years. It is also growing faster than the economy, and if that keeps up, Medicare could cause the national debt to swell up to more than two-thirds of the gross domestic product in just the next decade.

For years, experts have also warned that Medicare faces trillions of dollars in unfunded liabilities — meaning that it will have to pay trillions of dollars more than the amount of money that is coming in. In fact, last year, the Medicare trustees warned that the program was facing more than $36 trillion in unfunded obligations.

The whole essay, which chronicles both the many ways in which Medicare is broken and the incredible political challenge of fixing it, is worth reading. Nather is particularly good at describing the inherent uncertainty in claims that the new health care law will keep costs from rising as quickly. Despite all those White House promises that overhauling the health system would bend the cost curve downward, the program—along with the national budget—is still in deep fiscal trouble. And since Congressional Democrats decided to take a big chunk out of Medicare and put that money towards a new health insurance entitlement, it's likely that Medicare cuts will be off limits when attempting to balance the budget.

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Peter Suderman is features editor at Reason.

PoliticsPolicyNanny StateBudgetObamacare
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  1. Aresen   15 years ago

    The US is already broke.

    Medicare is just like the Road Runner handing Wylie Coyote an anvil after the latter has already run off the cliff.

    1. Wile E   15 years ago

      As long as you don't look down, everything will be just fine.

    2. Pro Libertate   15 years ago

      Not if you're also covered by Acme Insurance.

      1. Aresen   15 years ago

        Acme was forced to withdraw its "Cadillac" policy. Cartoon characters are non-union.

  2. Michael Ejercito   15 years ago

    Wait for many medical procedures to start becoming "elective".

    1. Sulu   15 years ago

      Death panels.

  3. Wind Rider   15 years ago

    It's the entire entitlement culture and the partisanship that's not afraid to use it. Kind of like Mutually Assured Destruction, without the scare movies of skin burning off goats filmed during Atomic Test shots.

    We'll probably learn the livestock in those experiments got off easy.

  4. No Name Guy   15 years ago

    Duh!

  5. zeroentitlement   15 years ago

    I'll bet if you asked America's oldsters this question, their responses would fill the spectrum between "that's crap" and "so what."

    This is from the demographic that loudly and proudly advertises its patriotism. They're loving America to death.

  6. rhea   15 years ago

    Medicare is just a way of saying that there is hope; on the contrary, people are losing hope for the government. Obama doesn't know how to take responsibility for anything unless it is so called good. He blames everyone for everything. So much for the crap he said at the Michigan high school. That was a crock.

    We help Americans move to Asia for jobs and prosperity. Learn more at http://www.pathtoasia.com

  7. t tam   14 years ago

    nice "courts find ppaca h.care
    reform act NOT constitutional>"

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