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Category: All > MedicareMedicare ForumApril, 29 2008
Medicare Forum Sponsored by the Galen Institute, The Heritage Foundation, and the American Enterprise Institute Featuring an address by HHS Secretary Michael Leavitt HHS Secretary Michael Leavitt gave a visionary but chilling speech about the looming threat that Medicare presents to taxpayers, to our economy, and to other government responsibilities during a major forum we co-sponsored in Washington on Tuesday with the American Enterprise Institute and The Heritage Foundation. Nearly 250 people attended the forum held at the Newseum, Washington’s newest and most modern museum devoted to interactive media exhibits. The conference room atop the Newseum had a panoramic view of the Mall, with the Capitol as the backdrop for Sec. Leavitt’s speech. It was a majestic setting for a visionary speech and an impassioned panel discussion about a powerfully important topic. Sec. Leavitt titled his speech "Drifting to Disaster" and used a vivid example of whitewater canoeing to give the audience a sense of the danger ahead: The river is “the growing obligation our nation has to pay for the health care of our senior and disabled citizens. Medicare’s liabilities have grown from a mere trickle 40 years ago,” he told the audience, into Class 5 Rapids today. “As new streamlets merge, it is becoming a raging torrent — more demanding and dangerous with each successive day.” Sec. Leavitt worked on his speech until 2 a.m. the morning of our forum, personally crafting the speech, reflecting the weight of responsibility and even panic he said he feels as a Medicare Trustee. “This is serious business involving trillions of dollars and the lives of hundreds of millions of people,” he said. He used a chilling example of Argentina, which was a world economic power at the turn of the last century, “wealthier even than the United States,” he said. But, “Over the next fifty years, successive governments constructed, and then expanded, an ever-generous system of social benefits, nationalized industries, and created a vast and bloated public administration,” he said. Argentina failed to invest in innovation and in its key industries and, as a result, “the world economy began to change while Argentina's didn't. Its productivity suffered. But the country kept on spending, content and confident it was better-off than its neighbors,” he warned. Eventually, “Creditors told Argentina, ‘no more, unless you fix your entitlements.’” “It seems inconceivable that the United States of America, the strongest economic power in human history, the land of the free and the home of the brave, could ever be in a situation like the one Argentina faced a decade ago. “But, is it? “Is it really difficult to imagine world credit markets saying to the United States of America — as the world did to Argentina: ‘Given your lack of action in dealing with your deficit and the entitlements causing the problem, we are beginning to lack confidence in you?’” “I hope I have made clear to you, just how alarmed I am and how alarmed we should all be. There is serious danger here.” His recommendations:
He envisions a Medicare system that would have three characteristics:
These are only highlights of the speech, which was extremely well received by the audience, including many veterans of health reform and experts in Medicare. Bob Moffit of The Heritage Foundation, a co-host of the conference, introduced former Sen. John Breaux of Louisiana, who Bob described accurately as a statesman who rises above partisan politics and puts the national interest first. Sen. Breaux worked heroically as chair of the National Bipartisan Commission on the Future of Medicare to seize the moment in 1999 when real reform might have been possible, but White House politics prevailed and that moment was lost. Sen. Breaux introduced Sec. Leavitt, who talked about the incredible burden we are putting on future generations, just as Sen. Breaux was waiting for word from the hospital that his son’s wife was delivering his newest grandchild. Our outstanding panel rose to the task in offering their own visionary “Solutions for Sustainability.” I cannot do them justice, but here are a few highlights:
Resources Medicare: Drifting to Disaster The Facts: Medicare Advantage Taking Back Our Fiscal Future Medicare's Bad News: Is Anyone Listening?
Event Photos
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