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March 4, 2005 Honorable Joe Barton
Dear Mr. Chairman: Today the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) released its analysis of the President's budget for fiscal year 2006, which includes an update of our baseline projections for the 2006-2015 period. In preparing those projections, we have revised our estimates of spending for Medicare, including the new Part D prescription drug program. I am writing to describe CBO's current estimate for that program. CBO's Original Estimate for the Medicare Modernization Act (MMA)In November 2003, CBO estimated that the MMA (Public Law 108-173) would result in additional direct spending totaling about $395 billion over the 2004-2013 period. That amount was the net of a number of different types of expenditures and receipts that would result from the legislation. It included an estimated $552 billion in mandatory spending for Medicare Part D--consisting of $771 billion in payments for benefits and mandatory administrative costs, offset by $219 billion in premiums paid by beneficiaries and payments by states. (Those payments by states represent part of their share of the savings from shifting some Medicaid spending for prescription drugs to Medicare.) Those costs were further offset by net savings of almost $13 billion from changes to Parts A and B of Medicare and estimated savings of almost $145 billion in Medicaid and other federal programs because the Part D benefit would reduce spending in those federal programs (largely by shifting some spending for prescription drugs from those programs to Medicare). Subsequent Revisions to CBO's Baseline ProjectionsSince enactment of the MMA, CBO's baselines have included explicit projections of Medicare spending for the Part D program (the $552 billion component of the original estimate). CBO's baseline projections for Medicare Parts A and B, Medicaid, and other federal health programs incorporate the effects of the MMA on spending by those programs. However, those effects--the $157 billion of offsetting savings in the original estimate--are not readily identifiable, and we do not project them separately. CBO currently estimates that net Medicare spending for the Part D program will total $593 billion over the 2004-2013 period. That is an increase of $41 billion over the original $552 billion estimate of net Medicare spending for Part D (see attached table). That change results from increases of:
Most of these revisions result from technical or economic changes in estimating assumptions or methodology. Less than $14 billion is the result of the final rule for the Medicare prescription drug program, which was issued by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services on January 28, 2005. In preparing the cost estimate for the MMA, CBO made numerous assumptions about how the legislative language would be implemented and about how implementation decisions would affect federal spending. Most of those assumptions were confirmed by the final rule, or the difference from what CBO originally assumed does not have a substantial effect on our spending projections. CBO's original assumption, however, differs from the guidance in the final rule regarding the formulary requirements plans must satisfy to be approved for participation in the Part D program. CBO had assumed that, in general, plans would be permitted to establish restrictive formularies to manage spending. However, the formulary guidance makes it clear that the Secretary will rely heavily on a comparison of the proposed formulary to "industry best practices" in deciding whether to approve a plan's application. As a result, CBO now expects that prescription drug plans will be slightly less effective at controlling drug spending than we had previously assumed. In addition, before the final rule was issued, CBO had assumed that the measure of family income used to determine eligibility for the low-income subsidy would include the income of dependents and would count dependents in determining family size. However, the rule states that the income test will count dependents but disregard their income. That provision, in conjunction with other refinements in how we estimate the number of individuals who meet the SSI income rules, produced an increase in our estimate of the number of participants in the low-income subsidy, resulting in a $6.5 billion increase in the projected cost of that subsidy. CBO does not separately project the offsetting savings to Medicaid and other programs from shifting some spending for prescription drugs from those programs to Medicare. It is likely, however, that those savings will be larger than the $145 billion in CBO's original estimate--both because of higher inflation projections and because our current estimate of the number of Medicare beneficiaries who are enrolled in Medicaid is higher than we previously projected. Thus, the increase in the estimated cost of establishing the Part D program over the 2004-2013 period would likely be less than $41 billion. The 10-year projection period that CBO uses for its budget projections has changed since the MMA was enacted; it now spans fiscal years 2006 to 2015 instead of 2004 to 2013, thus encompassing two more years of prescription drug benefits. Adding more years to the period covered by the estimate would, of course, add to the total cost being discussed, even if the original estimate had not changed at all. By CBO's estimate, net mandatory spending for Medicare Part D will total about $258 billion during those two additional years. I hope this information is helpful to you. The staff contact for further information is Tom Bradley. Sincerely, Douglas Holtz-Eakin
Attachment
Identical letters to the Honorable William "Bill" M. Thomas and the Honorable Charles E. Grassley |