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| NEW BUDGET PLAN CUTS MEDICAID | |
May 3, 2005 | |
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The U.S. House and Senate passed new federal budget plans last week that will cut Medicaid spending by $10 billion over the next five years. |
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For more on how this issue is seen at the state and congressional level, we're joined by New Hampshire Sen. Judd Gregg, Republican chair of the Senate Budget Committee, and Kansas Gov. Kathleen Sebelius, a Democrat. Sen. Gregg, you called the compromise that led the way to this Medicaid slowdown in spending growth a major step. Why was it so important to you? | |||||||||||||||||||
| A step forward | ||||||||||||||||||||
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The three major accounts are: Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid. Medicaid is probably one of the easier ones to address, at least in the short term, because there's a lot of fixing that can be done in Medicaid. And the proposal, which would slow the rate of growth from 41 percent down to 39 percent taking $10 billion out over a $1.12 trillion base so it's not a major step in the area of slowing the amount of money spent but the policy which would be behind it -- addressing that hopefully working with the governors we'd be able to get some control in the out years over how much we're spending on Medicaid. And that being one of the three major entitlement programs, that would be a step forward towards making sure our kids could afford the government when my generation retires. RAY SUAREZ: Gov. Sebelius, you heard Sen. Gregg describe the cut as a small one over ten years. What does it mean at the state level?
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| Cutting costs | ||||||||||||||||||||
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RAY SUAREZ: Senator, you heard the governor. It's already tough to bring everybody who is eligible in on budget and get them the care that they are eligible for. How are they going to cut costs in the coming years?
GOV. KATHLEEN SEBELIUS: Thank you, Senator. SEN. JUDD GREGG: -- that's true -- to the tune of $5 billion. We know if we take effective action in the area of co-pays, we can save two or three billion dollars. So you can accomplish all these savings and actually significantly more without affecting program. And, in fact I think you can expand program to many children and to seniors if you gave governors a lot more flexibility and a little less rate of growth, which is what we're proposing. And we are proposing to do it in concert with the governors. Gov. Leavitt is meeting, the head of HHS, the former governor of Utah is meeting with a number of governors to try to work out an agreement which will hit the $10 billion number rather I think comfortably and maybe even exceed it and give the governors more flexibility and allow them to care for more kids because they have more flexibility but a little less rate of growth in the program. And that's what we need to do because very simply our children can't afford the pay the taxes it's going to cost to bear the burden of our generation when it retires in Social Security and Medicare and Medicaid. There's a rather startling chart that shows that those three programs alone will spend every dollar that the federal government theoretically will take in by the year 2035. And we need to get on the business of reforming our entitlement programs so that our children can afford to have a quality lifestyle and don't have to spend all their money to support those of us who retire and are baby boomers. RAY SUAREZ: Well, Governor, the senator made some suggestions about concrete steps that could be taken. He suggests that you can still serve the population you need to serve and actually cut your rate of growth. Can you?
So these folks live in our small towns and communities. They live in rural communities in New Hampshire and in Kansas and all over the country. The people don't get cut because the budget number gets cut. And we would really love to engage in a discussion, finding ways together that we can make this program work into the future. | ![]() | |||||||||||||||||||
| Growth in medical rate of inflation | ||||||||||||||||||||
| RAY SUAREZ: Sen. Gregg, if I understand the way the numbers add up correctly, the medical rate of inflation in the United States is much higher than the generate of inflation, the Consumer Price Index. At a time when the cost of getting health care in the general population is growing faster than getting other goods and services, how do you cut Medicaid?
We also know there's a lot of money in the system. When you're talking $1.1 trillion, it's hard to figure out what a trillion dollars is, but it's a lot of money. We know that much. We can certainly save $10 billion without impacting services. And I know that strong governors are going to be able to come up with very creative ways to deliver more services to more kids if they have more flexibility. That's the goal here.
But we worry a lot about picking the number in advance, declaring that this is the number of savings without having the policy discussions. I do think again - I do think that the program works extremely well for children; it works extremely well for poverty-level adults. It actually is more cost effective than commercial insurance with a very beneficial package of preventive services. Where the cost drivers are and the conversation that needs to be had is what's happening with elderly Americans who should be part of the Medicare population but have been shifted to the states? What happens with disabled Americans who qualify for Medicare at a younger age, but are in very expensive care facilities? Those have been shifted to the states. And we would love to engage in that policy discussion, long-term care, pharmaceuticals, expensive medical equipment for that population without hindering our ability to deal effectively with the health insurance program for women and children. RAY SUAREZ: Well, Senator, if it's true that one of the big drivers of cost is the number of elderly people, we're about to crest with a demographic wave and have more and more older Americans, people entering the most expensive era of their lives in terms of medical care. You want to make the eventual slowdowns in growth even steeper, don't you?
So you've got to address the benefit side of the ledger for senior citizens who are coming, especially my generation. And one of the ways you do that is to start with programs like Medicaid where there is a lot of money that can be saved in pharmaceuticals; there is a lot money that can be saved by giving governors more flexibility on co-pay. There is money that can be saved by having states not use the program to fund their general government operation and work with the governors to give them the tools they need to be creative. I happen to believe that governors are the most creative managers we have in the country when it comes to delivering services. And I do believe any package that comes forward here working with Gov. Leavitt, that's his commitment, and the president is going to be vetted with the governors and it's going to be something the governors are going to feel they're quite comfortable with overall because it's going to give them more flexibility -- maybe a little slower rate of growth which we need from 41 percent to 39 percent. That's a tolerable slowdown in rate of growth. That's still a huge rate of growth. |
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| Kansas faces long term problems | ||||||||||||||||||||
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RAY SUAREZ: Gov. Sebelius, before we go, you heard the senator plead that brief, that eventually we're going to have a day of reckoning with these costs. In the out years, in ten years, in twenty years, is Kansas just going to have to say, no, we just can't do this much any longer for this population of people?
So this is a very troublesome time and the seniors that we're talking about are the poorest Americans or they wouldn't qualify for Medicaid. So it will put a big hole in the state's ability to try and provide affordable health care for all of our citizens and we'll be left in a situation of trying to figure out who to cut off the rolls, who doesn't qualify any longer for essential medical services? And that's a very difficult place for American citizens to be. RAY SUAREZ: Gov. Kathleen Sebelius of Kansas, Sen. Judd Gregg of New Hampshire, thank you both. SEN. JUDD GREGG: Thanks. GOV. KATHLEEN SEBELIUS: Thank you. | ![]() | |||||||||||||||||||
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