« Estate Planning and Probate CLE | Main | The Many Aspects of Estate Planning »
April 5, 2008
Trustees Report Medicare’s “Serious Financial Status”
The following is from a press release issued by the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services on March 25, 2008, entitled Medicare Trustees Report Shows Serious Financial Status of Medicare Program:
In their annual report, the Medicare Trustees today announced that both the Medicare Hospital Trust Fund and the Supplementary Medical Insurance Trust Fund expenditures are growing faster than the rest of the economy. The Trustees report expenditures were $432 billion in 2007, or 3.2 percent of gross domestic product (GDP), and are projected to increase to nearly 11 percent of GDP in 75 years.
The Trustees report that Medicare’s Hospital Insurance (HI) Trust Fund will become insolvent earlier in 2019 than reported last year. HI expenditure growth is estimated to average 7.4 percent each year over the next 10 years, a higher rate than either Gross Domestic Product (GDP) or Consumer Price Index (CPI) growth. This year the HI Trust Fund will spend more than its income, and from 2009 through 2017, about $342 billion will need to be transferred from the Federal treasury to cover beneficiaries’ hospital insurance costs.***
Special thanks to Neil E. Hendershot, Esq. (Attorney at law, Goldberg Katzman, P.C., Adjunct Professor, Widener University School of Law) for bringing this article to my attention. You can read more on Neil's blog at PA Elder, Estate & Fiduciary Law Blog.
April 5, 2008 in Disability Planning - Health Care, Elder Law | Permalink
TrackBack
TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/t/trackback/89778/27795302
Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Trustees Report Medicare’s “Serious Financial Status”:
» Recent Medicaid News Roundup Not Looking Good from The Ohio Trust Estate Blog
3 stories from 3 of the best TE bloggers out there recently caught my eye:
First from Michael J. Keenan and The Connecticut Elder Law Blog comes, Big Problems for Medicare in 11 Years.
It appears that the Medicare program will become unable to pay... [Read More]
Tracked on Apr 20, 2008 3:54:56 PM







