Lawmakers Consider Raising Medicare Age of Eligibility - YouTube

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bjbjVwVw RAY SUAREZ: And that brings us to a big part of the Medicare debate.
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Should the eligibility age for future retirees be raised from 65 to 67?
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Many Democrats have pressured the president this week to oppose any attempt to do so.
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But in an interview with ABC News, President Obama indicated he may be open to the idea
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as part of a compromise.
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We have our own debate about this and its potential impact.
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Neera Tanden is president of the Center for American progress.
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She previously worked for the Obama administration working on health care reform.
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And Tevi Troy is a senior fellow at the Hudson Institute and a former deputy secretary of
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health and human services in the George W. Bush administration.
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He served as Mitt Romney's health care policy adviser during the just completed presidential
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campaign.
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And, Tevi Troy, if we phase in a higher age for Medicare eligibility, do you really save
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much money?
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TEVI TROY, Hudson Institute: Well, yes.
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Over a 10-year period, we're looking at $125 billion in savings.
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Over a 75-year period, we're looking at about a trillion dollars off Medicaid -- Medicare's
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long-term liability.
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So this is real money.
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It makes a real difference, over 20 years, a 5 percent savings.
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Look, the Kohut argument is that people want cuts, but they don't want to specify the cuts.
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Policy-makers have to make choices about what the best cuts are.
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RAY SUAREZ: Are there any countervailing costs we have to worry about?
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If you move the bar from 65 to 67, don't people arrive at the threshold after years of uninsurance
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or underinsurance sicker, and thus more expensive than they would have been had they entered
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the program earlier?
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TEVI TROY: Well, there are certainly problems.
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And it's not perfect.
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And Neera's study talked a little bit about this.
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But what you have is, first of all, it's phased in over a long period of time.
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Second of all, people are living a lot longer.
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When Social Security first came around, people were living to 62.
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Medicare, they were living to 70.
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Now people are living until 80 years old.
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People retiring now are spending 30 percent of their time in retirement.
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So, we really need some kind of alternative, because we can't pay for these beneficiaries
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for such a long period.
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RAY SUAREZ: Neera Tanden, it's widely agreed cuts have to come from somewhere.
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The government writ large has to spend less money.
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Why not save money this way?
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NEERA TANDEN, Center for American Progress: Well, we agree.
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And at the Center for American Progress, we have put forward savings in the Medicare program
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of $385 billion.
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We believe there needs to be savings.
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But we can do savings, we can have savings that actually don't affect beneficiaries this
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way.
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And what I would disagree with Tevi about is really this is a way that just simply shifts
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costs from the federal government to employers, states, and seniors themselves.
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And, in fact, because Medicare is a program that is extremely efficient, it's actually
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cheaper for a beneficiary than private insurance, what ends up happening is that really for
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the amount of money you save at the federal level, people at the state level, employers,
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they spend more money per beneficiary.
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So what will happen is, we will have 400,000 seniors, we estimate 400,000 seniors without
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health insurance.
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And for those who do have health insurance, their costs will rise an average of $2,000.
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So this is really a poor idea of how to save money, because what it's doing is increasing
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what we spend as a country on health care just to simply lower the federal budget.
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That makes no sense.
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RAY SUAREZ: Didn't we do something similar with Social Security?
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By changing the eligibility date, people had to over time change their plans.
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They worked longer.
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They realized they were going to retire at 67, not at 65.
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Will people make similar adjustments in the face of a new Medicare eligibility age?
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NEERA TANDEN: I'm so glad you asked about this, Ray, because this has been a very poor
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analogy that people have used on both sides, because we don't believe -- no one believes
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-- Democrats don't believe and Republicans don't believe -- in universal retirement.
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We all recognize retirement is for a certain age.
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But, as Democrats and progressives -- and the president himself has believed in universal
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health care.
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We have the Affordable Care Act because we believe people should have insurance.
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We have systems of private insurance because we think people should have insurance.
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We don't think that people should just not have insurance below a certain age.
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So, really, what we're saying and because of the Affordable Care Act we have a system
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where a lot of these seniors who were cut off Medicare will move to -- be moved to private
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insurance or the Affordable Care Act, but it will just cost more money when we do so.
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And for us, that makes no sense.
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And for conservatives, who argue about competitiveness and the need to get our economy going, the
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idea that we're going to take seniors 65, 66, 67 years old out of the Medicare pool,
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where they're the cheapest group in that pool and they bring the cost of that pool down,
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and put the them in the pool of employers, you are going to raise the cost of insurance
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for everybody in the private insurance system and for employers, you make it more expensive
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to provide insurance.
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So this is really a bad idea for companies, for states who are -- who have big costs.
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And that's what -- why we think it's a poor idea.
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RAY SUAREZ: Tevi Troy, what about Neera Tanden's point?
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TEVI TROY: Well, sure there's cost-shifting.
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The whole point of this is that you're reducing Medicare's cost.
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And somebody has to apparently.
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That's why those polls earlier show that people don't want to do this.
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But the fact is that you will be reducing Medicare costs by $125 billion.
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If you're making this argument that the Affordable Care Act gives people opportunities to get
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insurance elsewhere, then that's what we're doing here.
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And, in addition, this is effectively a form of means-testing.
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It's saying that the wealthiest seniors will have to pay more.
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They will have to either get insurance privately or work longer, and that the poorest seniors
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will be more likely to go on Medicaid, may work longer, or they may also go on the exchanges.
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So there are other options out there, but this is it.
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And this is the point, is we're trying to force people to make choices.
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RAY SUAREZ: As we're phasing in the Affordable Care Act as a nation, many states are, as
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they were allowed by the Supreme Court decision, opting out of that new Medicaid plan.
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Can Medicaid really pick up the slack if the poorest seniors are going to get less services
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in the states where they're living?
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TEVI TROY: Well, sure.
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First of all, we don't know how many states are going to take up the Medicaid expansion.
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And we don't know how many states are going to take up the exchanges.
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I suspect that more states will do the Medicaid expansion than will do the exchanges.
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And that's what we're seeing so far.
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But the fact is that there will be a number of options.
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Medicaid is one of them.
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The exchange is one of them.
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Working longer is one of them.
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And, again, for the wealthier seniors, they're the ones who are going to have to bear the
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biggest brunt of this.
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The poorer seniors have more options.
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RAY SUAREZ: Neera Tanden, you just heard Tevi Troy submits that there are places in the
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design of current health care policy to pick up some of the slack for those 65-to-67-year-olds.
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Why wouldn't it work?
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NEERA TANDEN: Sure.
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Sure.
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Many will be picked up in the slack, but many won't be.
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And, again, we put out a report this week that shows we will have 400,000 seniors that
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won't have health insurance.
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And a lot of those seniors will come from states where they're not doing Medicaid expansion,
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so they will be lost in the cracks, if you will.
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And those are working -- those are people who would be working poor today.
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And so we're talking about making those seniors the most vulnerable.
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And when Tevi discusses the $125 billion this would save, we recognize that there's a need
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for savings.
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But we can have savings in the Medicare program that doesn't hit beneficiaries, that doesn't
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break the promise of Medicare, the promise that's been made to seniors, and that really
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looks at things like competitive bidding, other ways that you can derive savings in
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the health care system by making it more effective and more efficient, and to drive down national
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health expenditures, because that should be all our goal.
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Instead of simply making seniors pay more for their health care, we should actually
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reduce those expenditures.
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RAY SUAREZ: Neera Tanden and Tevi Troy, thank you both.
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TEVI TROY: Thank you.
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MARGARET WARNER: Our reporting partners at Kaiser Health News asked policy experts how
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they would control Medicare costs.
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Read their responses online.
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And you can see the full Pew Research Center poll as well.
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gda@ gda@ :pa@ urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:smarttags place urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:smarttags
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PlaceType RAY SUAREZ: And that brings us to a big part of the Medicare debate Normal Microsoft
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Office Word RAY SUAREZ: And that brings us to a big part of the Medicare debate Title
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