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d-19131House OversightFinancial Record

Medicare cost estimates vastly underestimated since 1965

The passage highlights historical underestimation of Medicare spending but provides no new allegations, specific financial flows, or direct links to powerful individuals beyond generic references to p Original 1965 Medicare cost estimate was $500 million/year (≈$3 billion in 2005 dollars). Actual Medicare spending has been roughly ten times higher than the original estimate. Net loss exceeded $3 b

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #020864
Pages
1
Persons
0
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage highlights historical underestimation of Medicare spending but provides no new allegations, specific financial flows, or direct links to powerful individuals beyond generic references to p Original 1965 Medicare cost estimate was $500 million/year (≈$3 billion in 2005 dollars). Actual Medicare spending has been roughly ten times higher than the original estimate. Net loss exceeded $3 b

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federal-budgetingpolicy-analysisfinancial-flowbudgetary-oversightentitlement-programsmedicarehealthcare-spendinghouse-oversighthistorical-estimates

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The Original Estimates of Medicare’s Costs Were Vastly Underestimated * In 1965, the official estimate of Medicare’s costs was $500 million per year, roughly $3 billion in 2005 dollars.* * The actual cost of Medicare has turned out to be 10x that estimate. - Medicare’s actual net loss (tax receipts + trust fund interest — expenditures) has exceeded $3 billion (adjusted for inflation) every year since 1976 and was $146 billion in 2008 alone. In other words, had the original estimate been accurate, the cumulative 43-year cost since Medicare was created would have been $129 billion, adjusted for inflation. - In fact, the actual cumulative spending has been $1.4 trillion** (adjusted for inflation)...in effect, 10x over budget. * While calculations have been flawed from the beginning for some of USA Inc.’s entitlement programs, little has been done to correct the problems. An accurate economic forecast might have sunk Medicare. David Blumenthal and James Morone “The Lessons of Success — Revisiting the Medicare Story”, November 2008 Sources: * Lyndon B. Johnson Library & Museum. Medicare spending data per White House OMB. “Dept. of Health & Human Services, CMS, data adjusted for inflation based on BEA’s GDP price index. (@)E) www.kpcb.com USA Inc. | High Level Thoughts 45 Many Leaders Have Voiced Concerns About Entitlement Program Math / Spending The entitlement programs are not self-funded...they are unfunded liabilities. They are the single biggest component of spending going forward. -- Ben Bernanke, Chairman of the Federal Reserve Testimony before House Budget Committee, June 9, 2010 The time we have is growing short...there are serious questions, most immediately about the sustainability of our commitment to growing entitlement programs. -- Paul Volcker, Former Chairman of the Federal Reserve Chairman of President Obama’s Economic Recovery Advisory Board Speech at Stanford University, May 18, 2010 KP a USA Inc. | High Level Thoughts 46

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