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Antwort in : /alt/activism/d
Absender   : institute@igc.apc.org  (Institute for Public Accuracy)
Betreff    : The Right's "Remedies" for Medicare
Datum      : Sa 02.05.98, 19:25  (erhalten: 03.05.98)
Groesse    : 2975 Bytes
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## Nachricht am 03.05.98 archiviert
## Ursprung : /misc/activism/progressive
NEWS RELEASE -- April 29, 1998
From Institute for Public Accuracy
(202) 347-0020
915 National Press Building, Washington, D.C. 20045
____________________________________________________
HARMFUL REMEDIES PRESCRIBED FOR MEDICARE, CRITICS CHARGE
Experts Say Program's Troubles Are Due to Private Health Care
System
     WASHINGTON -- Renewed efforts are underway to popularize
very damaging "solutions" for Medicare, some experts say.
     One influential think tank, the Cato Institute, urged
Wednesday that the federal government take major steps toward
privatizing Medicare. The group claimed that "successful Medicare
reform" must rely on "the efficiencies, incentives, competition
and productivity of the private sector."  
     But researchers associated with the Institute for Public
Accuracy, a nationwide consortium of policy experts, likened the
recommendation to putting out fire with gasoline.
     Sumner M. Rosen, professor emeritus of social policy at
Columbia University, warned Wednesday: "The real objective is to
shrink and weaken the role of government, and privatize these
enormous streams of funds that are so attractive to the
profit-seeking visions of the largest and most powerful economic,
corporate and financial institutions."
     According to Mark Weisbrot, an economist at the Washington-
based Preamble Center for Public Policy, "The problem is that
private health care costs have not been brought under control
because health care reform never happened."
     In contrast to the conventional wisdom, Weisbrot added, "the
basic problems with Medicare are not demographic." Medicare's
projected financing problems "have nothing to do with the fact
that it is a government program. Nor do they result primarily
from the aging of the population. Medicare's costs are driven by
the costs of private health care."
     Weisbrot added: "Over the next 30 years, the effect of
medical care inflation will have four times as much impact as the
baby boomers' retirement on the average family's real income."
     John L. Hess, a policy analyst on economics and aging who
covered such issues as a longtime reporter for The New York
Times, denounced the Cato Institute's policy prescriptions for
Medicare. "What Cato is proposing would ruin Medicare and pull
the plug on needy people," he said. Privatization scenarios for
Medicare "would favor the affluent over the less affluent, the
healthy over the sick, and private insurance over public, mutual
help. It would of course promote what private insurance
specializes in -- cherry picking."
     The Institute for Public Accuracy also took issue with
Cato's assertions regarding efficiency. It noted that the
government spends roughly 2 percent of Medicare funds for
administration, whereas private HMOs average ten times that for
overhead and profits.

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