Research Catalog

Title
  • Bring market prices to Medicare : essential reform at a time of fiscal crisis / Robert Coulam, Roger Feldman, Bryan E. Dowd.
Author
Coulam, Robert F., 1948-
Publication
Washington, D.C. : AEI Press, c2009.

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TextRequest in advance RA412.3 .C68 2009Off-site

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Additional Authors
  • Dowd, Bryan
  • Feldman, Roger D.
Description
ix, 152 p.; 23 cm.
Summary
  • Bringing market prices to Medicare is not merely a matter of political strategy or tactics; it will require a fundamental shift in Americans' attitudes toward health care, starting with the realization that Medicare's current payment methods cannot be sustained. A competitive pricing system alone cannot cure all of Medicare's financial problems, but it is a significant step in the right direction. It is the only solution that preserves Medicare's entitlement benefit while also substantially improving the program's finances. (Publisher).
  • Establishing a competitive pricing system for Medicare will have drawbacks as well: Beneficiaries in some markets would have to pay more to stay in the FFS Medicare plan, while others would lose generous supplementary benefits currently offered by private MA plans in areas where these plans are overpaid. Coulam, Feldman, and Dowd contend that the best way to address public and political opposition to this crucial reform is not to downplay its challenges but rather to consider carefully the needs and expectations of beneficiaries and establish a gradual transition that would alleviate most of the disruption beneficiaries might otherwise experience.
  • Medicare is quickly approaching insolvency, in part because the program pays too much for the services it provides. In Bring Market Prices to Medicare, Robert F. Coulam, Roger Feldman, and Bryan E. Dowd propose a groundbreaking solution: Use market-based arrangements to set prices for Medicare plans. The authors contend that the federal government should pay only the cost of the most economical health plan in each market area. To accomplish this, both traditional fee-for-service (FFS) Medicare and private Medicare Advantage (MA) plans would submit bids for the government's business; the federal contribution to premiums would be set to equal the lowest bid in the market area This competitive pricing system would penalize plans that bid too high - their beneficiaries would pay higher premiums - providing an incentive for plans to offer their best prices. Meanwhile, low-bidding plans would be rewarded with increased enrollment. Such an approach would reduce Medicare spending by 8 percent, shoring up the program's finances while empowering consumers to make sensible choices about their healthcare.
Series Statement
  • AEI studies on Medicare reform
Subject
  • Competitive Medical Plans > economics
  • Economic Competition
  • Health Care Reform
  • Health care reform > United States
  • Medicare > Economic aspects
  • Medicare > economics
  • United States
Bibliography (note)
  • Includes bibliographical references (p. 131-140) and index.
Contents
The purposes of Medicare -- Five ways to pay Medicare health plans -- Technical issues in competitive pricing for Medicare -- Estimating the savings from competitive pricing in Medicare -- Should FFS Medicare be allowed greater flexibility? -- The uneasy relationship of competitive bidding to the law and politics of Medicare -- No need for a demonstration : a gradual transition to reform should start now.
ISBN
  • 9780844743219
  • 0844743216
LCCN
^^2009043596
OCLC
458577895
Owning Institutions
Harvard Library