February 24, 2023 Jackson Hammond
Ever
since President Biden’s State of the Union (SOTU) address, Democrats and
Republicans have spent a good deal of time accusing each other of cutting (or
planning to cut) Medicare spending. Democrats claim Republicans want to
cut traditional fee-for-service (FFS) Medicare, while Republicans claim the
Biden Administration is cutting Medicare Advantage (MA). Let’s
look at what these supposed “cuts” are and see if we can separate the political
rhetoric from the policy reality.
First,
let’s review the “cuts” to MA. Recently, the Center for Medicare and
Medicaid Services (CMS) released the proposed rate notice rule for MA. By its own
calculations, CMS predicts that MA plans will see a 1.03 percent increase in
revenue in 2024. There’s dispute about this, however – that number represents
a 2.27 percent decrease before factoring in the expected
growth of the “risk adjustment trend” of 3.3 percent. The operative word here
is “trend” – CMS doesn’t actually know how much risk adjustment payments will
go up in 2024 until the 2023 data come in. The 2.27 percent decrease in plan
revenue before factoring in the “trend” prediction is largely from updates to
hierarchical condition categories (HCCs) – essentially the payment codes for a
given condition. CMS is trying to synchronize MA HCCs with FFS Medicare
HCCs and so eliminated around 2,000 of these codes – many of which
were for the early stages of a disease (prediabetes, for example).
Synchronizing these codes may appear to make sense until one learns the reason
the code systems were different in the first place. In a nutshell, the MA
codes were intended to incentivize plans to identify conditions earlier, thus
leading to both treatment savings and better care for beneficiaries. One Avalere Health study,
which doesn’t factor in the “trend” prediction, finds that the new rule will
decrease benefits for MA enrollees by an average of $540, which would mean
around $15 billion in decreased benefits, or “cuts,” in one year. A lot of the
decrease hinges on how the risk adjustment growth pans out, and plans may
actually see a slight bump if CMS’ prediction is correct.
Next,
let’s review the “cuts” to FFS Medicare. Raising the specter of FFS cuts
is a pastime of those on the left (and, in many cases on the right) to attack
any plan that might affect recipients’ benefits. During the midterms and
after the SOTU, Democrats pounced on Republican proposals for entitlement
reform, specifically that of the Republican Study Committee (RSC)
and a plan by Senator
Rick Scott (R-FL). Senator Scott’s plan would have sunset every federal law not
reauthorized by Congress in five years, including (until he edited it) Medicare
and Social Security. This plan went exactly nowhere, so we’ll focus on the RSC
plan.
The RSC’s plan would
raise the age of Medicare eligibility to 67 (in line with Social Security) and
then index the age of eligibility to life expectancy, create a federal plan
that combines Parts A, B, and D, merge the trust funds, eliminate quality
scoring bonuses from MA, and make reforms to Medigap plans, among other
items. The exact math of the RSC changes isn’t made clear in the document,
but neither is Democrats’ reasoning that it would “cut” FFS. The closest thing
to a “cut” is simply delaying when seniors, who are living and working longer
than ever, can claim benefits, and of course a later eligibility means less
money spent.
Are
there, in fact, cuts looming for America’s favorite health entitlement program?
Probably not. The RSC reforms are intended to make FFS Medicare
sustainable – which it is currently not. A real
cut would be refusing reforms and letting the Medicare Part A trust fund go
broke and forcing benefit cuts and/or tax increases. As for MA, much hinges on
the risk adjustment changes. One reason CMS made changes to the HCCs is that
numerous MA plan sponsors have been accused of
inflating their risk adjustment scores by manipulating HCC codes. If the plans
are indeed engaging in this practice, cracking down on them wouldn’t exactly
constitute a “cut.”
While
yelling “Medicare cut!” might be an easy way to attack one’s political
opponents, it does nothing to actually fix the program’s enormous problems.
Congress and the administration would far better serve Medicare beneficiaries
by focusing their energy on the latter.
Disclaimer
https://www.americanactionforum.org/weekly-checkup/medicare-cuts/#ixzz7uaPTdKKJ
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