Crapo, Brady Press Treasury for Status of Medicare Hospital Insurance Trust Fund
Status is critical as Congress considers spending measures and necessary changes to address fund insolvency
Washington, D.C.--U.S. Senator Mike Crapo (R-Idaho), Ranking Member of the Senate Finance Committee, and Representative Kevin Brady (R-Texas), Ranking Member of the House Ways and Means Committee, sent a bicameral letter to Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen requesting a revised Medicare Hospital Insurance (HI) trust fund insolvency projection as soon as possible. Assessing the true nature of the HI trust fund’s current financial status is time sensitive as Congress is expected to consider additional changes to the Medicare program this year.
“We
simply cannot wait anywhere from two to four months for the next Medicare
trustees report to be made public,” the letter reads in part.
“Either through reconciliation or regular order, there is every expectation
that Congress will consider additional health care related legislation this
year…Before Congress debates any further legislation that impacts the Medicare
program, it is imperative that policymakers have accurate information
explaining when the HI trust fund will be insolvent…We ask that you provide us
a revised HI insolvency projection, one that incorporates the economic impact
of the COVID-19 pandemic, as soon as possible.”
Ranking
Member Crapo previously raised
concerns about the long term solvency of the Medicare Hospital Insurance
trust fund during Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier
Becerra’s confirmation hearing on February 24, 2021.
Full
text of the letter can be found HERE
and below.
_________
Dear Secretary Yellen,
Medicare’s Hospital Insurance (HI) trust fund is currently running a cash flow deficit. In 2020, the Medicare trustees projected that expenditures from the HI trust fund would exceed annual income by $9.2 billion. This means that the HI trust fund is redeeming securities in order to pay benefits. Alarmingly, the Medicare trustees expect annual cash flow deficits will persist through the end of the projection period (2020-2030). As a result, the Medicare trustees project that the HI trust fund’s reserves will be depleted by 2026, at which time it will no longer be able to pay full benefits for seniors. Under existing laws, that could mean benefit cuts as early as 2026.
The 2020 Medicare Trustees report, however, did not
include an analysis reflecting the potential effects of the COVID-19 pandemic
on the Medicare program. The significant, but necessary, Medicare funding
that Congress made available to hospitals and other health care providers in
response to the pandemic may have inadvertently accelerated the insolvency date
of the HI trust fund. Additionally, because Medicare
Part A is financed by payroll taxes that are split between employers and
employees, unemployment caused by the pandemic likely resulted in less revenue
flowing into the HI trust fund.
On September 2, 2020, the Congressional
Budget Office (CBO) estimated that the Medicare trust fund could run out of
money in 2024, two years earlier than the Medicare trustees projected.
Then, on February 11, 2021, CBO released its updated winter baseline. The
new baseline takes into account increased tax revenue from a stronger economic
forecast. As a result, CBO revised its HI trust fund insolvency date
projection back to 2026. While CBO predicts the HI trust fund will be
depleted in 2026, there is substantial uncertainty behind their forecast.
For example, the baseline projections of the HI yearly balances show that the
trust fund’s starting balance for 2025 is only $21 billion. Given
historic Medicare spending, that is an extraordinarily low reserve
amount. It is, therefore, unclear whether the trust fund could remain
solvent through the entirety of 2025. It seems likely that CBO’s updated
estimate has only improved the life expectancy of the trust fund by one year
from 2024 to 2025.
In a disturbing trend, the annual
Medicare trustees’ reports have not consistently been released on time. The Social Security Act mandates that the Medicare trustees issue their
annual report to Congress no later than April 1st of each calendar
year. Over the past decade, on average, the requisite Medicare trustees
report was released 70 days past the statutory deadline – ranging from 126 days
late in 2010 and 112 days late in 2015 to 103 days late in 2017.
According to a July 30, 2019 report by the U.S. Government Accountability
Office (GAO), 2008 was the last year in which the statutory deadline had been
satisfied. The 2020 report was 21 days overdue, missing the deadline by
fewer days than the past decade’s average, yet still late.
The 2019 GAO report recommended that the Secretary
of the Treasury, as Chairperson of the Boards of Trustees of the Social
Security and Medicare trust funds, work to improve management of the report
development schedule in order to provide Trustees reports to Congress by the
statutory deadline; and, “establish a policy to inform Congressional committees
of jurisdiction when the trustees determine that the reports are expected to
miss the issuance deadline.” While committees have received an email from
Treasury officials identifying that this year’s reports will be delayed for
some indefinite period, we are unaware that any policy has been developed or
followed.
We simply cannot wait anywhere from two to four
months for the next Medicare trustees report to be made public. Congress will
soon be making key decisions regarding both fiscal year (FY) 2022 spending and
long term outlays through the budgetary window (2022-2031). Either
through reconciliation or regular order, there is every expectation that
Congress will consider additional health care related legislation this year.
Before Congress debates any further legislation
that impacts the Medicare program, it is imperative that policymakers have
accurate information explaining when the HI trust fund will be insolvent.
If we receive an amended insolvency date projection as late as three months
from now, well after Congress and the Administration have already enacted
further legislative changes, then we may ultimately fail to take the immediate
actions necessary to strengthen the Medicare program.
We ask that you provide us a revised HI insolvency
projection, one that incorporates the economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic,
as soon as possible. Should you have any questions regarding this
request, please contact Erin Dempsey with the Finance Committee minority staff
or Jay Gulshen with the Ways and Means Committee minority staff.
Thank you for your prompt attention to this very
important matter.
Sincerely,
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