63°F
weather icon Clear

COMMENTARY: Insurer bailout exposes failures of Biden agenda

In a move that lays bare the flaws of the Inflation Reduction Act, Medicare officials just scrambled to announce a federal subsidy that could total $23 billion yearly to prevent Medicare’s prescription drug benefit from collapsing.

In a classic case of unintended — if utterly predictable — consequences, this insurer bailout shows how the IRA ends up harming the seniors it was supposed to protect. Making matters worse, Medicare’s maneuvers to cover up the facts of the IRA’s failures expose the essential dishonesty of typical Washington politics.

Knowing the IRA would be judged by patient out-of-pocket costs for prescription drugs and recognizing that the legislation did nothing to reduce the cost of providing prescription medicines, Medicare responded by … shifting the deck chairs. If patients would pay less for medicines on the back end at the pharmacy counter, Medicare would get its pound of flesh from those same patients on the front end in the form of increased monthly premiums.

The facts: The IRA has caused a dramatic drop in Medicare prescription drug plans, with almost 100 fewer stand-alone plans available this year than in 2023. Medicare announced this year that the national average bid amount for drug coverage from the remaining providers increased from $64 in 2024 to nearly $180 in 2025. Bid rates are linked to premiums, and Medicare officials faced the prospect that premiums could triple just one month before the presidential election.

You read that right: The IRA, as written, would have hit seniors with massive premium hikes. Did Democrats know what they were voting for in 2022?

Some may have. If so, they also knew they couldn’t pass the IRA by openly adding billions annually to the national debt to keep premiums from crushing seniors — mainly because they needed the money they were diverting from Medicare for other subsidies like tax credits for electric vehicles. So they kept mum, counting on unelected bureaucrats to do the job.

Problems with the IRA are not limited to premium increases for millions of Americans. Patients also face new limits on drug access in Medicare Part D. Seniors face onerous new preapproval requirements for medications. And in many cases, doctors’ first-choice treatment recommendations get short-shrift from insurers pushing medications that make them more money.

The long-term effects of the IRA will be even worse. The law stifles the innovation critical to tackling the as-yet unmet needs of patients suffering from chronic diseases, cancers and Alzheimer’s. It takes, on average, more than $2 billion to bring a safe and effective treatment to patients. The IRA’s drug price provisions have raised grave doubts among drugmakers about their ability to meet the costs of drug discovery and make a return on investment to fund the next cycle of research.

Already, at least 36 research programs and 21 drugs have been abandoned since the IRA passed. According to a University of Chicago study, this policy will rob Americans of 135 lifesaving medicines over the next 15 years.

For now, though, Medicare’s insurer bailout isn’t a real solution. At best, it’s a scheme to hide the IRA’s failures until after the election. The law, as designed, would require unsustainable annual fixes in the $20 billion range in perpetuity. At worst, this move is part of a relentless push by progressives toward a single-payer health system, where the federal government pays the bills — at least until the tax man comes knocking.

It’s time for policymakers to stop focusing on partisan short-term fixes and implement real long-term policies to protect seniors and make Medicare Part D sustainable.

Tony Zagotta is the president of the Center for American Principles. He wrote this for InsideSources.com.

THE LATEST
LETTER: Order in the classroom

Even with a new interim superintendent and $281 million just for textbooks and supplies, Clark County students will not be learning as they could and should due to unruly classroom behavior.

LETTER: Instead of abortion, how about birth control?

It is mind-boggling that the most important issue some voters are concerned about is the ability of a mother to abort her unborn child.

LETTER: Why did Question 3 include ranked-choice?

I voted “yes” on Question 3, not for ranked-choice voting, but for a voice in the primary elections as an independent voter.

COMMENTARY: Trump has made the GOP great again

For those of us who voted for Donald Trump, it feels like the opening line of my father’s famous TV campaign commercial — “It’s morning again in America.”

LETTER: Las Vegas is closed

We don’t need to build more housing for Californians.

LETTER: Reading is fundamental

When kids graduate from high school nowadays — if they graduate — they read at about a third-grade level and comprehension.