The Obama administration has released its annual report on
national health care expenditures, and
news organizations are seizing on the headline figures showing
that as a result of the recession, health care spending rose at a
relatively modest 4 percent clip in the United States in 2009 while
accounting for a record 17.6 percent of the U.S. economy given the
lower gross domestic product. But Cato’s Michael Cannon delved a
bit
deeper into the numbers and discovered something unusual — the
administration’s Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, which
issues the report, reclassified some public spending as private,
which makes the government’s role in health care appear smaller
than it did previously. Interestingly, this comes at a time when
government’s share of spending was closing in on the 50 percent
mark, and when the Obama administration fending off charges that
last year’s national health care law represents a government
takeover of medicine.
As Cannon details in a helpful
chart, based on CMS’s earlier classification, government
spending accounted for 47.3 percent of health care outlays in 2008,
but yesterday’s revised numbers bring that percentage down to 41.2
percent — representing a difference of $121.3 billion. The new
report estimates that in 2009, government spending accounted for
43.6 percent of all health care expenditures. If you take into
account the 6.1 percent discrepancy under the earlier
classification, it implies that government spending would have been
roughly 50 percent in 2009, a number that it would have no doubt
blown past as the new health care law gets implemented. But under
the new measurements, it will take several additional years to
cross that threshold. (It’s also worth noting that the report also
finds that government spending on health care grew by 9.9 percent
in 2009 while private spending shrank by 0.2 percent — so the new
numbers are clearly the result of this classification
change).
Cannon asks whether the Obama administration is deliberately
“cooking the books.” Whatever the case, it’s certainly an
interesting change. I have a call into CMS on the matter, and will
update my post if and when I hear back.
UPDATE: Richard Foster, the chief actuary of CMS, emailed me a
response saying that, “I can
assure you that there was no effort by the Administration to
influence our NHE estimates or the
associated Health
Affairs article in any way. As Chief
Actuary for the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, I
take my independent role on behalf of the Administration, Congress,
and the public very seriously. Any effort to ‘cook the books’
would be rejected.”
In my view, Foster deserves the benefit of the doubt as an
honest broker. He has by no means been a cheerleader for ObamaCare.
In fact, in a series of prior reports, he
contradicted many of the administration’s key claims during the
health care debate, including the idea that the health care law
would bend the cost curve down. Unfortunately, due to the way the
Democrats’ rushed legislation through Congress, those reports never
became public with enough time to influence the passage of the
bill. So why the discrepancy that Cannon cited?
According to Foster, CMS has migrated toward a different view of
whether a given expenditure is public or private. Instead of
concentrating on the end payer (for instance, the insurer who
directly pays medical bills), CMS has shifted toward focusing on
who finances the spending (in this example, the employer or
individual who pays premiums to the insurer). This has had the
affect of making the government contribution to total health care
spending appear smaller in recent years, relative to the other
method, which was typically cited by analaysts in prior years.
As a reason for the shift, Foster explained how the tangled
relationship between the public and private sector has blurred the
distinction between the two categories of spending:
In fairness, I should add that over the last few
years we have been putting more emphasis on
the financing estimates,
versus
the payer estimates.
The reason is that allocating health expenditures by financing
category is relatively straightforward, while allocating by payer
is becoming more difficult. A current example involves the
Workers Compensation program. It’s required by law and
generally constitutes a “public” program, but most financing is by
private businesses and most payments are by private health
insurance companies. Should it be classified as a public
payer or a private payer? Similarly, when the health
insurance exchange coverage takes effect in 2014, it will be
available through private health insurance companies, but a
substantial portion of the premiums will be paid by Federal
subsidies. As the distinction between public versus private
payers has become less clear, we’ve opted to focus more on the
financing, which is more straightforward to classify and
describe.
Foster’s full response after the jump.
I wanted to reply to today’s
post on the government share of health care spending,
which draws from Michael Cannon’s post from yesterday. My
goal is to clarify for you the reporting of our 2009 National
Health Expenditure (NHE) data. In particular, I can assure
you that there was no effort by the Administration to influence our
NHE estimates or the associated Health
Affairs article in any way. As Chief
Actuary for the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, I
take my independent role on behalf of the Administration, Congress,
and the public very seriously. Any effort to “cook the books”
would be rejected.
Regarding the new NHE estimates, we have not “re-categorized
about 6 percent of national health expenditures – well over $100
billion – from ‘government’ to ‘private’…” as Dr. Cannon
claimed. Unfortunately, the table in his post is comparing
two different concepts:
- One is based on
who finances health
care (our “type of sponsor” concept).
- The other is based on who directly pays
for health care services (our “source of
funds” or “payer” concept).
For example, you and
the
American Spectator jointly
pay the premiums for your health care insurance (“financing”
concept), while your private insurance company pays most of the
bills for your health services (“payer” concept). Because the
two concepts are fundamentally different, it isn’t meaningful to
compare, as Dr. Cannon has done, the 2008 NHE estimates under the
payer concept with the 2009 estimates based on a financing
concept. Both approaches are useful and appropriate for their
intended purposes, but they are apples and oranges. The NHE
estimates under each concept are shown separately in Exhibit 2 and
Exhibit 5 of this year’s
Health
Affairs article. (Both were also
available with last year’s article.) A detailed description
of these concepts is available in the
documentation on the CMS website.
In our estimates released last year, we reported that the
government financed $916.2 billion of health services and supplies
in 2008 (see
Appendix Exhibit 1). The corresponding
amount of government financing for total NHE (including investment
expenditures for research, structures, and equipment) was $979.8
billion, or 41.9% of NHE.
For this year’s estimates, the corresponding amount of
government financing for total NHE in 2008 is $985.4 billion, which
is referenced in Dr. Cannon’s post. This amount represents
41.2% of NHE.
As you can see from this data, the total amount financed by
the government has not been re-categorized and actually increased
slightly from our previous estimates (though it is a slightly
smaller share of overall NHE due to other revisions to our 2008
data). We noted in the new Health
Affairs article that the government share of
NHE financing increased significantly in 2009, in large part as a
result of the recession, with a reduction in the number of employed
individuals and an increase in the number of Medicaid
enrollees.
A corresponding comparison can be made for health expenditures
by public versus private payers, with the result that the estimates
for 2008 have changed only slightly. Again, there has been no
re-categorization from public to private.
In fairness, I should add that over the last few years we have
been putting more emphasis on
the financing estimates,
versus
the payer estimates.
The reason is that allocating health expenditures by financing
category is relatively straightforward, while allocating by payer
is becoming more difficult. A current example involves the
Workers Compensation program. It’s required by law and
generally constitutes a “public” program, but most financing is by
private businesses and most payments are by private health
insurance companies. Should it be classified as a public
payer or a private payer? Similarly, when the health
insurance exchange coverage takes effect in 2014, it will be
available through private health insurance companies, but a
substantial portion of the premiums will be paid by Federal
subsidies. As the distinction between public versus private
payers has become less clear, we’ve opted to focus more on the
financing, which is more straightforward to classify and
describe.
Eric Cartman| 1.6.11 @ 10:21AM
Cooking the books? How dare you! Would a man who inhaled the innate honesty of Chicago Politics cook the books? I ask you, would a man who taught ACORN how to organize and befriended a couple who bombed our Pentagon and took place in other terrorist attacks cook the books? Where do you get off with such maligning?! Good day with you, Sir!