http://www.forbes.com/sites...ney-would/" jQuery1720370481662382891="104">
http://www.forbes.com/sites...ney-would/" st_processed="yes"> NORFOLK, VA - AUGUST 11: Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney (R) and U.S. Rep. Paul Ryan (R-WI) wave as Ryan is announced as his vice presidential running mate in front of the USS Wisconsin August 11, 2012 in Norfolk, Virginia. (Image credit: Getty Images via @daylife)
You wouldn�t know it from listening to the Obama campaign, but there�s only one Presidential candidate in 2012 who has cut Medicare: Barack Obama, whose Affordable Care Act
cuts Medicare by $716 billion from 2013-2022. Today, the Romney campaign reiterated its pledge to repeal Obamacare, and promised to �restore the funding to Medicare [and] ensure that no changes are made to the program for those 55 and older.�
It�s an important point of policy clarity. Left-of-center writers, such as
Ezra Klein of the
Washington Post, accurately point out that Paul Ryan�s 2011 and 2012 budgets repeal Obamacare while preserving Obama�s cuts to Medicare. �The difference between the two campaigns is not in how much they cut Medicare,� he writes, �but in how they cut Medicare.�
Why the Democrats' 'Mediscare' Attack Won't Work Against Paul Ryan and Mitt Romney Avik Roy Contributor The Next Physician Access Problem: Medicare Avik Roy Contributor How Mark Amodei of Nevada Beat Democrats' Medicare Scare Tactics Avik Roy Contributor Mitt Romney's Promising Plan for Entitlement Reform Avik Roy Contributor When it comes to comparing Obamacare to the Ryan plans, Ezra is right. I�ve long argued the same thing: that the way to understand the difference between Ryancare and Obamacare is not in the scale of the cuts to Medicare, which are roughly similar, but in the competing
mechanisms used in reform.
Obamacare emphasizes government control and central planning. The law empowers a panel of 15 unelected government officials, called the
Independent Payment Advisory Board, to make changes to the Medicare program that will reduce Medicare spending: primarily
paying doctors and hospitals less, as is done with the Medicaid program. Over time, liberal health-policy types hope that IPAB can be used to
introduce rationing into Medicare, using the panel to determine what types of procedures and treatments that Medicare will and will not pay for.
The
Wyden-Ryan plan, co-authored by liberal Sen. Ron Wyden (D., Ore.) and Paul Ryan, preserves the Obamacare targets for future Medicare spending, but employs an entirely different mechanism: premium support and competitive bidding. Seniors would enjoy exactly the same benefits that they do now, but along with the traditional Medicare program, they would enjoy the option of choosing among a selection of government-approved private insurance plans.
House Republicans, led by Paul Ryan, passed something very similar to Wyden-Ryan in their 2012 budget. One notable difference are that the GOP budget targets Medicare growth of GDP plus 0.5 percent, just as the FY 2013 Obama budget does. (Wyden-Ryan targeted GDP plus 1 percent.) Importantly, as I noted above, the GOP budget repeals Obamacare, but preserves that law�s Medicare cuts.
However, as Romney noted in his
60 Minutes interview over the weekend, his plan and Ryan�s plan are not identical. In response to a question about the Ryan budget, Romney responded, �I have my budget plan, as you know, that I�ve put out. And that�s the budget plan we�re going to run on.�
And the Romney campaign has explicitly stated that it will
not preserve Obamacare�s cuts to Medicare. �Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan have always been fully committed to repealing Obamacare, ending President Obama�s $716 billion raid on Medicare, and tackling the serious fiscal challenges our country faces,� said Romney policy director Lanhee Chen in a Monday statement. �A Romney-Ryan Administration will restore the funding to Medicare, ensure that no changes are made to the program for those 55 or older, and implement the reforms that they have proposed to strengthen it for future generations.�
Democrats will, of course, try to blur the distinction between Ryan�s budgets and Romney�s proposal. And there may be a sound policy case for substantially cutting Medicare for current retirees, as Obamacare does. But whatever you think of Obamacare�s cuts to Medicare, the fact is that a Romney administration would repeal them, and replace them with a different set of reforms, reforms that would reduce Medicare spending by a lesser amount.
Follow Avik on Twitter at @aviksaroy.