According to
The Washington Post, tomorrow Rep. Paul Ryan and
Democratic senator Ron Wyden of Oregon are planning to jointly
introduce a new plan to rein in Medicare’s costs without
transitioning away from Medicare’s traditional fee-for-service
model.
The Post’s report includes a brief description of what
the reform would look like: it would add traditional Medicare to
the private plans that would be subsidized by the government under
the Ryan premium-support model. The subsidy would fluctuate based
on medical costs, instead of being tied to GDP growth — which
could result in the government being on the hook for higher
spending. The plan would also include catastrophic coverage with
capped out-of-pocket costs for seniors.
There is much more to be said about the desirability of a plan
like this, although I’ll mention right off the bat that it would be
a drastic improvement over the status quo.
Perhaps more importantly, however, are the politics of Ryan’s
decision to partner with a Democrat on a more bipartisan
proposal.
Ryan has spent the past two years establishing himself as,
basically, the authority on conservative-minded fiscal reform, with
the Roadmap for America’s Future and its successor, the Pathway to
Prosperity. It was an uphill battle, but eventually almost every
Republican in the House and Senate voted to enact Ryan’s Medicare
reform plan, essentially validating and endorsing Ryan.
They took an enormous political risk in doing so, by exposing
themselves to the Democratic criticism that they voted to end or
cut Medicare in the next election.
Now Ryan has taken the political capital he earned and spent it
on a bipartisan proposal, joining with a solidly liberal senator.
Ryan’s new plan supercedes his previous budget, thereby,
presumably, bringing a ton of Republican support with it — Ryan is
now an authority, after all. It also undercuts the Democrats’
planned attacks on Republican support for the old Ryan plan,
because it’s now genuinely bipartisan. In other words, one key
feature of the political terrain has been shifted around.
Nite| 12.14.11 @ 8:21PM
Have to see more specifics to determine if Seniors will be hurt by whatever cuts they are planning. I am curious to see if they had any Medical personnel advising them on these plans?
Larry| 12.15.11 @ 1:55AM
Hmm. I also have to see more details. If this doesn't deal adequately with the current fee-for-service approach that Medicare has now, no doctor will support it, and the plan will collapse as it is about to do now. And by the way, Nite, there isn't any reform "plan" that anyone can develop that is going to "hurt" no one. The question becomes, how much pain are the American people willing to endure to save a system of health care that can help the most people for the optimally least cost to them?
jfxgillis | 12.15.11 @ 3:56AM
Translation: Ryan pushes House Repubicans out onto limb, saws said limb.
eric siverson| 12.15.11 @ 2:15PM
Why should congressman Ryan or anyone else be concerned about balancing any budget or raising the U.S. debt when the The U.S. federal reserve bank can print money and even loan another 7.7 trillion dollars to foreign banks . All this without anyone even knowing about these loans . not even our elected presidents . We only learned of these loans after Bloomberg finacial spent 2 yrs in court forcing the federal reserve to disclose these secret loans .We obviously have nothing to fear in debts . Surely the federal reserve will salvage us if the salvage Europe