Still on a Medicare Kick and How Republicans Should Cut It’s Cost

Republicans Should Cut Medicare . . .

Rather than Medicaid.

Oh, but they are the ones making the political contributions.

As soon as House Republicans’ budget resolution was published, it was clear that almost all of the $880 billion 10-year spending cut target for the Energy and Commerce Committee would have to come out of Medicaid, because Medicaid accounts for 93% of projected 10-year spending under E&C’s purview — excluding Medicare. And Medicare, unlike Medicaid, is a sacred cow.

That’s too bad, because while the cuts that Republican lawmakers are proposing to Medicaid funding will likely cause 10-20 million people to lose coverage, federal payments to private Medicare Advantage plans, which now enroll 54% of Medicare beneficiaries, can and should be cut by something in the neighborhood $880 billion over ten years — a reduction that would still leave the plans overpaid.

MedPAC

Don’t ask me, ask MedPAC, the Medicare payment advisory commission that reports annually to Congress on Medicare spending. According to MedPAC’s March 2025 report “In 2025, we estimate that Medicare will spend 20 percent more for MA enrollees than it would spend if those beneficiaries were enrolled in FFS Medicare, a difference that translates into a projected $84 billion.” Projecting that estimate forward, the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget estimates that MA plans will be overpaid by $1.2 trillion from 2025-2034.

Favorable Selection and Over Payment

Risk Score Gaming

Impact of cutting Medicaid or Medicare

Lowering MA Costs