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Politics : HOWARD DEAN -THE NEXT PRESIDENT? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Lizzie Tudor who wrote (825)12/6/2003 11:47:51 PM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 3079
 
Good editorial on Medicare:

Ticking Time Bomb of Debt
The budget-busting Medicare bill offers dubious benefits
at outrageous costs.

November 25, 2003

latimes.com

EDITORIAL


Everett Dirksen gets credit for the quip about
government spending, "A billion here, a billion there,
pretty soon you're talking about real money." If only the
late, legendary Illinois senator and longtime minority
leader could see Congress now that it's poised to pass
a Medicare prescription drug benefit.

The measure, which President Bush staunchly backs, is
a time bomb for the federal budget deficit. "The U.S.
budget," investment house Goldman, Sachs & Co.
stated Friday in its newsletter, "is out of control."
With a
deficit of $500 billion looming for 2004, neither the
country's seniors nor anyone else can afford adding to
the debt that chokes off economic growth and
suppresses job creation.

At least taxpayers got a reprieve on the $33-billion
energy bill, which GOP leaders conceded Monday
would not pass this year.
It had dozens of outrageous
pork provisions, including a $2-billion bailout for
operators of older, coal-burning plants, as well as $23 billion in tax breaks,
mostly for fossil fuel producers. "Sunset" provisions - phony expiration dates -
on some of the tax cuts meant that the bill's cost probably would have been
double what Congress assumed.

But if this bill was a budget misdemeanor, then overhauling Medicare, at $400
billion, is a fiscal felony. The Congressional Budget Office says the Medicare
changes would cost $40.2 billion in 2007 but would zoom to $65.2 billion by
2013.

Though the bill is a bonanza for the health-care industry and employers - at least
$125 billion is directed toward them in the next 10 years - it's far from clear that
the cost is justified.
Seniors must look closely to see how this "reform" affects
them. And just how will we pay for Medicare when its beneficiaries number some
77 million by 2013?

Though a billion here and there may not seem like much, the skyrocketing budget
deficit has a direct effect on business investment. The higher the deficit, the more
the Federal Reserve must raise interest rates to avoid inflation and to attract
investors so the government can pay its debt.
Low deficits in the 1990s let Fed
Chairman Alan Greenspan hold down interest rates. But Congress' return to its
free-spending ways prompted him a few weeks ago to warn of "destabilizing
effects" as baby boomers tap their Medicare and Social Security benefits.

Unfortunately, the presidential campaign season already seems to be in full swing,
and Bush, who in January urged Congress to "control spending," has gotten
feckless about giant deficit spending. With the staggering expense of the Iraq
occupation and the war on terrorism hanging over them, it's hardly the time for the
president and Congress to play budget roulette. The remarkable generation that
endured wars, the Depression and other privations wouldn't want seniors' needs
to bankrupt the nation's future. But political shortsightedness combined with a
reckless stewardship by Congress and this administration, is doing just that, and
responsible voices must speak up, fast, to stop this fiscal train wreck.

latimes.com