Monday, March 29, 2010

Universal Health Care, What will it Cost?

Do you believe that the new health care bill will save $143 billion over its first 10 Years? If so, I have bad news for you--it won't. According to the Congressional Budget Office, this projected "savings" assumes that Medicare spending per beneficiary increases "significantly more slowly" than it has historically. This assumes that Medicare reimbursements to physicians are significantly reduced.

Rationing can take many forms. Reducing reimbursements to physcians and hospitals, if Congress has the will power to do so, is one form of rationing. Less available care translates into less care.

To put these projections into perspective, when Medicare was signed into law (1965) the projected annual cost of Medicare in 1990, 25 years in the future, was $12 billion. The actual cost of Medicare was $13 billion 10 years later in 1975. It was actually $98 billion in 1990, more than 8 times the projected cost. What does this tell us about the probable accuracy of the projections associated with the new health care bill of a one trillion cost over its first 20 years?

Unfortunately, however, this is just the tip of the ice berg. The current projected cost of unfunded or underfunded future costs of social security and care for the elderly is in excess of $100 trillion. To put that in perspective, the federal government will need to run a $2.0 trillion surplus for the next 50 years in order to cover the costs of these existing programs. What are the odds that will happen?

By now, we should all know that there is no such thing as a "free lunch." Someone has to pick up the tab. In this case, increasing taxes alone will not get the job done. The only realistic solution is to ration care. Is anyone ready to begin the hard work involved in developing a "rational" rationing system?

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

The Cost/Savings Gap

Yesterday, I noted a study showing that 43% of working Americans have less than $10,000 in savings. 54% have less than $25,000 in savings. A newly released study helps put these numbers in perspective.

According to a study released by the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College, the average uninsured lifetime healthcare expenditure for a typical married couple age 65 is $197,000. Notice, this is the "uninsured" cost--the cost after Medicare and any supplement have been applied.

Furthermore, if one factors in potential nursing home costs, the typical couple will spend $260,000 with 5% at risk of having to spend in excess of $570,000. Even at the peak of the stock market in 2007, only 15% of US households had $570,000 in total financial assets.

Assuming uninsured costs will be $197,000, and 54% of Americans have less than $25,000 in savings, there is a substantial gap between future costs and resources available to pay. Does anyone really believe that taxes can be increased enough to cover this gap? Even if costs are contained at 2010 levels, an impossible assumption, the gap remains. Neither increased taxes nor cost containment can solve this problem.

Someone will have to decide how much care will be provided to those who cannot pay for their own care. This will be true for both health care and long-term nursing home care. Do you want to be part of a dialogue that tackles this problem head on, or, do you want to wait for Washington to "solve" the problem?

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

Who will pay for their care?

According to CNNMoney.com, 43% of American Workers age 25 and older have less than $10,000 in savings. This is up from 39% in 2009. The survey found that 54% of those with some form of savings have less than $25,000 in savings.

Obviously, savings in this amount will not, in and of itself, cover the wages lost through retirement. But, even if thanks to Social Security and pension earnings, the Baby Boomers survive retirement, how will they pay for assisted living or nursing home care?

To put this in context, the current average cost of nursing home care is $8,000 per month. In today's dollars, 54% of workers have saved enough to cover about 3 months of care. 43% of workers have saved enough to cover just over one month of nursing home care. In other words, even if we require individuals to deplete 100% of their own personal resources, this will be only a drop in the bucket toward the over-all cost of care.

This leads inevitably to the only two options--generate more revenue through taxes or ration care. In March, 2005, then Federal Reserve Chairman, Alan Greenspan, in testimony before the House, is quoted as saying: "I fear we may have already committed more physical resources to the baby-boom generation in its retirement years than our economy has the capacity to deliver." If that was true in 2005, it is all the more certain in 2010.

This leaves rationing of care as the only realistic option. For those who have not saved enough--over half US workers, who will decide the amount of care they will receive? Who decides who lives or dies? Unless you are willing to leave this decision to govermental agencies and political action committees, it is time for the dialogue to begin.