Medicare
hospital fund reserves likely to be exhausted in 2026:
U.S. report
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[April 23, 2019]
(Reuters) - Medicare's hospital insurance
fund will be depleted in 2026, as previously forecast, and Social
Security program costs are likely to exceed total income in 2020 for the
first time since 1982, according to a government report released on
Monday.
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The report from the board of trustees for Social Security and
Medicare also projected that Social Security funds could be depleted
by 2035, leading to potential reductions in expected payouts to
retirees and other beneficiaries.
U.S. healthcare costs are expected to be a hot topic during the 2020
presidential campaign, with uncertainty around possible cost-cutting
solutions already weighing on healthcare stocks this year.
Senator Bernie Sanders, among a large field of contenders for the
Democratic presidential nomination, has unveiled a
"Medicare-for-All" plan that would eliminate private insurance and
shift all Americans to a public healthcare plan.
However, Republicans have denounced the proposal as impractical and
too expensive.
"At a time when some are calling for a complete government takeover
of the American health care system, the Medicare Trustees have
delivered a dose of reality in reminding us that the program's main
trust fund for hospital services can only pay full benefits for
seven more years," Seema Verma, administrator for the Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), said.
The report said costs associated with the Medicare Supplementary
Medical Insurance (SMI) trust fund, which covers drug costs in Part
B and D in the program for seniors, are likely to grow steadily from
2.1 percent of gross domestic product in 2018 to about 3.7 percent
of GDP in 2038, given the aging U.S. population and rising costs.
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Cost projections for Part D drug spending, which covers prescription
medicines obtained at the pharmacy, are lower than in last year's
report because of slower price growth and a trend of increasing
manufacturer rebates, CMS said.
Part B primarily involves specialty drugs administered on an
in-patient basis.
Trustees project that the SMI fund for Part B and Part D will remain
adequately financed into the indefinite future because current law
provides financing from general revenues and beneficiary premiums
each year to meet the next year’s expected costs.
The Trump administration in January proposed a rule that would
overhaul the use of rebates in government-run healthcare plans,
potentially ending a decades-long system under which drugmakers
provide large discounts off the list price of their medicines to
benefits managers and insurers rather than to consumers.
(Reporting by Tamara Mathias in Bengaluru; Editing by Bill Berkrot)
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