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Analysts Predict Big Jump in Health Care Share of GDP


 

WASHINGTON — Even as the economic downturn causes private health spending to slow, public sector health spending is rising, according to a federal analysis.

An estimated 3.4 million people may lose private health insurance coverage in 2009 and another 2.6 million may lose coverage in 2010, said Sean Keehan, an actuary at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services' Office of the Actuary.

Total U.S. health care spending was an estimated $2.4 trillion in 2008, which is an increase of 6.1% over 2007, according to the annual projection of health spending trends published online in the journal Health Affairs. This year, spending is expected to grow by only 5.5%.

That rate of growth is expected to far outpace the nation's gross domestic product in 2009. Economists for the CMS said they predict the GDP to shrink by 0.2% this year.

Meanwhile, the health care share of GDP is expected to grow 1.4%—the biggest annual jump as a portion of GDP since economists first started tracking this indicator in 1960, said Christopher Truffer, a CMS actuary. Health spending will account for 17.6% of the GDP in 2009, according to the report (Health Affairs 2009 Feb. 24 [doi:10.1377/hlthaff.28.2.w346]).

The economists projected that overall health spending will rise by only 4.6% in 2010, thanks largely to the mandated 21% reduction in physician payments required under the Sustainable Growth Rate target set by Medicare.

However, since Congress usually eliminates the cuts or grants a fee increase every year, the CMS economists calculated some alternative scenarios. If payments were kept constant, Medicare spending would rise 6.4%, or 3.9% faster than if the cuts went into effect.

Medicaid spending will grow 9.6% in 2009, up from 6.9% in 2008. Private health insurance benefits spending grew an estimated 5.8% in 2008, but will rise only 4.1% in 2009.

The CMS projections make it seem like cost-containment efforts are having a negligible effect on restraining overall health spending. The economists said the Medicare fee cuts would make a difference, but that they did not have the data to calculate whether other cost-containment efforts in the private sector in particular were having any effect on restraining health spending.

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