Congress
worked late into the night this past weekend to pass a Medicare
prescription drug bill that represents the single largest expansion
of the federal welfare state since the Great Society programs
of the 1960s. The new Medicare drug plan enriches pharmaceutical
companies, fleeces taxpayers, and forces millions of older Americans
to accept inferior drug coverage while doing nothing to address
the real reasons prescription drugs cost so much.
Nothing from
the government is free, of course, and prescription drugs will
be no exception. The perception that seniors will be able to flash
a Medicare card at the pharmacy and walk out without paying anything
is completely false. In fact, many seniors will end up paying
more out-of-pocket under the Medicare scheme than they do now
with their private plans. The Medicare drug benefit requires monthly
premiums, co-pays, and deductibles, just as private plans do.
It also has gaps in coverage that no sensible person would accept
if offered by a private insurer. Like all government programs,
the Medicare drug entitlement will be shabby, degrading, and inferior
to the private sector.
The vast
majority of older Americans already have private prescription
drug coverage that they dont want changed, and this 78%
of seniors may well lose their good private coverage altogether.
In fact, the governments own Congressional Budget Office
estimates that at least one-third of all private companies will
dump their retirees into the Medicare system as a result of the
new bill. Big corporations love the Medicare drug plan, because
they want to shift the responsibility for providing drug benefits
to their retirees onto taxpayers. Dozens of major companies shamelessly
advertised in the Washington Times and elsewhere in support of
the Medicare bill for this very simple reason. Their pension plans
are dangerously underfunded, so naturally they use their lobbying
influence to promote a Medicare drug system. In this sense the
Medicare bill is a taxpayer-funded corporate bailout for hundreds
of American companies.
The financial
impact of this legislation on taxpayers cannot be overstated.
Government projections that the drug program will cost $400 billion
over the next decade cannot be trusted, as existing Medicare programs
cost 4 times more than estimated when they were created. The likely
cost is at least $1 trillion over 10 years, and much more in following
decades as the American population grows older. The Medicare trust
fund is already badly in the red, and the only solution
will be a dramatic increase in payroll taxes for younger workers.
The National Taxpayers Union reports that Medicare will consume
nearly 40% of the nation’s GDP after several decades because of
the new drug benefit. That’s not 40% of federal revenues, or 40%
of federal spending, but rather 40 % of the nation’s entire private-sector
output! Clearly this new Medicare spending will bury our great-grandchildren
unless we rethink the wisdom of ever-increasing entitlement programs.
Phony
senior lobbies want free drugs paid for by taxpayers; American
corporations want to dump their retirees into Medicare at the
expense of taxpayers; pharmaceutical companies want huge windfalls
provided by taxpayers; and politicians want to get reelected by
passing incredibly shortsighted legislation courtesy of taxpayers.
Most of todays politicians will never have to answer to
future generations saddled with huge federal deficits because
of this expansion of Medicare. Those generations are the real
victims, as they cannot object to the debts being incurred today
in their names.