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Home :  Federal Budget & Tax : 
Federal Budget & Tax:      News     Blog     Background    



Monday, October 15, 2007

Competitive Pressure

At the behest of Committee Chair Rep. Henry Waxman (D-CA), the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform has produced a report on the wildly successful cost-reducing cost-inflating results of the private provision of the Medicare drug program (Medicare Pard D)

Findings of the report:
  • The administrative expenses, sales costs, and profits of the privatized Part D program are almost six times higher than the administrative expenses of traditional Medicare.


  • The rebates negotiated from drug manufacturers by the private Part D insurers will reduce Medicare drug spending by 8.1% in 2007. In contrast, the Medicaid program receives rebates from drug manufacturers that reduce drug spending by 26%, over three times as much.


  • private insurers receive rebates from the drug manufacturers on purchases paid out-of-pocket by beneficiaries. In 2007, the Part D insurers are expected to receive $1.0 billion in drug rebates from transactions in which beneficiaries in coverage gaps pay 100% of the drug costs.


  • In 2007, 59% of prescriptions filled by Medicare Part D will be filled with generic drugs. This level of use of generic drugs compares favorably with Medicaid, which fills 54% of prescriptions with generic drugs. It does not compare favorably with the experience of the Department of Veterans Affairs, which fills 68% of prescriptions with generic drugs.

Note: Title is snark directed at David Broder's piece pimping the free market as a cure-all.



Posted by Craig Jennings



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