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Aides to the GOP candidate say the plan would rely on competition
-- without caps or a cost-cutting board -- to control spending and avoid cost shifts to seniors. Retirees entering the program in 2022 and later would have the choice of private insurance or a government plan modeled on traditional Medicare. The private plans would bid to provide health care to seniors in a given part of the country. The government's payment would be pegged to the second-lowest bid, or the cost of the government plan, whichever was lower. Seniors who chose a higher-cost plan would pay the difference. Those who picked lower-cost coverage could keep the difference for medical expenses. Low-income retirees and people in poor health would get a more generous government payment. The Romney campaign refused repeated requests for an on-the-record explanation of the Medicare policy. Instead, spokeswoman Andrea Saul issued a statement extolling what she called "a plan that empowers patients and families with more choices and robust competition, reforms insurance markets with strong consumer protections, and proposes real entitlement reform that protects and strengthens Medicare for today's seniors and future generations." Former U.S. Comptroller General David Walker, now a deficit-reduction advocate, said it's hard to understand how the Romney plan would work because so much of it remains fuzzy. "I just don't know that we have enough details to meaningfully evaluate it at this point," Walker said. "People are trying to evaluate what the cost would be, but they just don't have enough facts to effectively evaluate it."
[Associated
Press;
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