Administration and Funding of Medicare

Funding for Medicare comes partially from payroll taxes, known as FICA (Federal Insurance Contributions Act) taxes. FICA comprises Social Security tax and Medicare tax. The rate of the Medicare tax is 2.9 percent. Employers withhold 1.45 percent from their employees and match it with another 1.45 percent [Ref]. High-income Social Security beneficiaries also pay income tax on their Social Security income, some of which goes toward Medicare. This money goes into a trust fund used to pay doctors, hospitals and private insurance companies when Medicare patients use their services. This trust fund has been more difficult to manage than the Social Security trust fund, because health care expenditures are harder to track and can change quickly. Medicare Part B is partially (about 25 percent) paid for by premiums and co-pays. In all, Medicare costs about $277 billion per year, roughly 13 percent of the total federal budget [Ref].


Look at your payroll check stub --
you're contributing towards Medicare with your FICA taxes.


­Initially, Medicare was as a single-payer system in which the government acted as the administrator and distributor of taxpayer-funded health insurance. However, since the 1990s, government officials have made changes that allow private insurers to take part in Medicare, opening the system to market forces. The Medicare Advantage Plan (or Medicare + Choice) programs are the primary example of this.


Source: 2005 Annual Report
of the Social Security and Medicare Boards of Trustees

Projected distribution of Medicare
funding for the 2006 fiscal year


The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMMS) administers Medicare. It falls under the Department of Health and Human Services. During Medicare's early decades, there was little oversight on claims and payments from Medicare to providers. This resulted in inflated claims and a rise in the costs of health care, which put a severe strain on the Medicare trust fund. In 1983, Medicare went to a fixed rate payment plan, instead of just paying whatever doctors and hospitals billed them. Today, participating health care providers accept Medicare payments as "paid in full" for services. Non-participating providers can only charge patients up to 15 percent beyond the amount approved by Medicare.

Next, we'll learn about the history of Medicare.

The Costly Drug Plan
There was never any doubt that adding a prescription drug plan to Medicare would cost the government a lot of money. Initial estimates put the cost at $400 billion over 10 years. However, just a year before the plan was to go into effect, the Office of Management and Budget issued a new cost estimate: $535 billion [Ref]. With politicians concerned about a rising deficit and unwilling to raise taxes to help pay for the program, that extra $135 billion will be a bitter pill.