Login | Register

Search

Home

Advertising

Topics Menu

  • YPN Connect
    • » YPN Connect Home
    • » My Profile
    • » Resources
  • Commentary
    • » Business
    • » Money
    • » Politics
    • » YP Community
  • On the Go
    • » On the Go Home
    • » Blogs
    • » Resources
  • Groups
    • » My Groups
    • » Groups Directory
  • Events
    • » Find Events
  • Videos
    • » Watch Videos
  • About

YPN Daily Bulletin

  • World Population Projected to Hit 7 Billion Next Year
  • Data From 100 Million Facebook Profiles Leaked Online
  • Bill Gates Questions Traditional Education Policies
  • More People Downsizing Homes, Adding Roommates
  • Media Crusader Looks to Copyright Lawsuits to Help Save Industry
Read More

Most Liked on Facebook

This Week's Poll

How willing are you to make sacrifices to fund the wars/reduce the debt (e.g. higher taxes, buying war bonds, etc. )?:

YPN Connect

» Contribute a Link

Jesse Nankin's picture
Jesse Nankin
Teaching "Stuff" About Ecology
Jesse Nankin's picture
Jesse Nankin
Reality TV Takes on Its First Death
kelly_21's picture
kelly_21
Supreme Court Rules on gun control in Second Amendment case
Jesse Nankin's picture
Jesse Nankin
NYT: The Pessimism Bubble and the Economy
Jesse Nankin's picture
Jesse Nankin
A Call for Young Blood (Donors)
See More

Most Popular

  • Read
  • Video
  • Data From 100 Million Facebook Profiles Leaked Online
  • World Population Projected to Hit 7 Billion Next Year
  • Post-Interview Etiquette While on the Job Hunt
  • Stock Market Watch: It's Up! It's Down! But Why?
  • Is the Recovery Act Working? You Bet It Is.

Subscribe | View All

YPN Network

» Join the Network

See More

Aging and Health Costs

Sun, 06/28/2009 - 16:14 Marc Goldwein
  • Marc Goldwein's blog
  • Send to a Friend

Recently, CBO released its Long-Term Budget Outlook, projecting deficits will hit 7.5 percent of GDP by 2020, almost 15 percent by 2035, and well over 40 percent by the end of the 75-year budget window if we continue current policies. Driving these deficits is the rapid growth of Medicare, Medicaid, and to a lesser extent Social Security, along with the subsequent interest payments that result from high levels of debt sustained through continued borrowing.
 
A debate exists among experts, though, over the source of growth over these programs. OMB Director (and former CBO Director) Peter Orszag has been among those arguing that health care cost growth is the primary driver of projected entitlement costs, and that there has been an overemphasis among experts on population aging.
 
In its 2007 release, The Long-Term Outlook for Health Care Spending, CBO displayed the following graph, showing that for Medicare and Medicaid, the growth of health care (beyond GDP growth) is a significantly larger factor than population aging -- and in fact population aging explains only around 15 percent of the growth by 2080.
 

 
This chart attributes all of the "interaction effect," which explains nearly one third of the growth, to the light blue section. In its newest release, CBO allocates the interaction effect between the two effects, and finds that population aging contributes closer to 30 percent of the growth in Medicare and Medicaid. When they look at a less distant year, 2035, they find population aging accounts for about 44 percent of the growth.
 

 
And all of this excludes the role of Social Security. Adding this program to the mix, population aging is responsible for around 44 percent of entitlement growth in 2080, and 64 percent in 2035.
 

 
The extent to which health care cost growth versus population aging drives entitlement growth has important policy implications. To the extent the problem is health care, we should be devoting considerable efforts toward designing and implementing policies to slow health care cost growth.
 
To the extent population aging is a driver, some changes to encourage greater and longer lasting labor force participation, as well as higher birth rates and immigration may be possible, but the focus will have to be more on the traditional options of cutting spending and/or increasing taxes.
 
Of course, with a long-term outlook like this, we're going to have to do both.


  • Fiscal Policy
  • Health Care
  • Political Economy
  • Politics
  • YP Community

  • Marc Goldwein's blog
  • Send to a Friend

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
Input format
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd> <table> <tbody> <thead> <th> <tr> <td> <object> <embed> <img> <div> <span>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.

More information about formatting options

CAPTCHA
Are you a human?
4 + 11 =
Solve this simple math problem and enter the result. E.g. for 1+3, enter 4.
YPN Connect
My Profile
My Connections
Resources
Add Topics
Share My Web Activity
Commentary
Business
Money
Politics
YP Community
On the Go
Blogs
Resources
Groups
My Groups
Groups Directory
Add a Group
Start a Discussion
Events
Find Events
Add an Event
Videos
Watch Videos
Add Videos
YPN Network
For Advertisers
For YP Organizations
For Publishers & Bloggers
YPNation
About
Register
Privacy
Terms of Use
Search
Help
RSS
Copyright © 2010 YPNation. All Rights Reserved.