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| Medicare Drug Costs Prompts Tax-increase Call | | Print | |
| Written by James Heiser | ||||
| Monday, 24 August 2009 16:15 | ||||
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According to an Associated Press article, “Millions of older people face shrinking Social Security checks next year, the first time in a generation that payments would not rise. The trustees who oversee Social Security are projecting there won't be a cost of living adjustment (COLA) for the next two years. That hasn't happened since automatic increases were adopted in 1975. By law, Social Security benefits cannot go down. Nevertheless, monthly payments would drop for millions of people in the Medicare prescription drug program because the premiums, which often are deducted from Social Security payments, are scheduled to go up slightly.” Thus, in essence, a cut is not a “cut” when the government says so. Thus, for example, Jacob Weisberg wrote in January 2006 for Slate.com: “President Bush thought that millions would welcome his intervention. But the effort has not gone as planned. Costs are spiraling out of control, and many of the people we wanted to help are protesting that the situation is worse than ever. Three years later, the entire poorly conceived enterprise is in jeopardy. Kennelly's group wants Congress to increase Social Security benefits next year, even though the formula doesn't call for it. She would like to see either a 1 percent increase in monthly payments or a one-time payment of $150. The cost of a one-time payment, a little less than $8 billion, could be covered by increasing the amount of income subjected to Social Security taxes, Kennelly said. Workers only pay Social Security taxes on the first $106,800 of income. Such a tax increase would be highly regressive, falling on the middle and lower income ranks of America’s work force. The specter of past “one-time” taxes and programs also looms in the shadows, as what has been proposed as a “one-time fix” becomes an annual ritual. Trackback(0)
Comments (2)
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still free
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The health care bubble has burst. This article should be given/sent/posted/plastered everywhere you can think of so that all the proponents of Obama's "free" healthcare plan can finally see what change really means. Yes, Obama's plan has us on the fast track to the poor house. And just for the record, where are those jobs he promised us? |
GaryA
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The Medicare pharmaceutical bill need never have cost as much as it has! It's sadly fitting that the John Birch Society's New American would lament a bill that has helped so many of the poor with their pharmacy bills but not mention what is perhaps the worst aspect of the Medicare pharmaceutical bill - it's outrageously unnecessary costs. For, in contrast with the Veterans Administration, Blue Cross, Blue Shield, Kaiser Foundation, etc., "bulk buyers" routinely are given discounts by Big Pharma. But as a provision of the Medicare pharmaceutical bill, NO DISCOUNTS are given to Medicare beneficiaries. Why? As "60 Minutes" and other news outlets have shown, REPUBLICANS in congress who refused to go along have admitted that Big Pharma lobbyists wrote the bill! [Just as, you can be sure, they'll end up writing whatever is finally passed on health care.) Taxpayers could have saved a fortune, but for Big Pharma's shark lobbyists. It's good that some some destitute Americans no longer have to go without often life-saving medications. But it's a real travesty that the taxpayers who pay for this benefit are treated worse than any large group Big Pharma does business with. And it's not as if Big Pharma is a model of sound and ethical business practices. Marcia Angell, MD, the former editor of the New England Journal of Medicine, the highly respected, peer-reviewed medical scientific journal, has written a blistering expose of the corruptions of Big Pharma in this past January's "New York Review of Books." The title - "Drug Companies & Doctors: A Story of Corruption" - tells it all. For the "60 Minutes" article, see: http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/03/29/60minutes/main2625305.shtml or: http://www.edrugsearch.com/edsblog/60-minutes-big-pharma-wrote-the-medicare-prescription-drug-bill/ Dr. Angell's expose of Big Pharma is available at: http://www.nybooks.com/articles/22237 Gary |






As Congress and the Obama administration prepare to collectivize the entire healthcare industry, America’s senior citizens are paying the cost for an earlier administration’s experiment in healthcare.

