Practice Economics

Retiring Baby Boomers leave fewer workers to pay for Medicare


 

References

The influx of aging Baby Boomers into the ranks of the retired will reduce the ratio of workers available to pay for each Medicare part A beneficiary by 40% from 2000 to 2030, according to the 2016 report of the Medicare Trustees.

In 2015, there were 3.1 workers for each part A beneficiary, putting the United States in the middle of a projected drop from 4.0 workers per beneficiary in 2000 down to 2.4 in 2030. The Boomer-induced drop will largely be over by then, but the decline will continue until there are about 2.1 workers for each part A beneficiary by 2090, the report said.

“This reduction implies an increase in the [Medicare part A] cost rate of about 50% by 2090, relative to its current level, solely due to this demographic factor,” the trustees noted.

The projections are done using three sets – low-cost, intermediate, and high-cost – of economic and demographic assumptions. The figures presented here are from the intermediate assumption.

rfranki@frontlinemedcom.com

Recommended Reading

Supreme Court deadlocks on immigration policy case
MDedge Psychiatry
Counseling geriatric patients about opportunity and risk when ‘digital dating’
MDedge Psychiatry
How to talk to patients and families about brain stimulation
MDedge Psychiatry
Multisite NIH-sponsored research can now use single IRB
MDedge Psychiatry
Maximize depression treatment efforts with measurement-based care
MDedge Psychiatry
Supreme Court will not hear pharmacy religious liberty case
MDedge Psychiatry
Feds raise buprenorphine patient loads
MDedge Psychiatry
Medical errors and the law
MDedge Psychiatry
Docs to CMS: MACRA is too complex and should be delayed
MDedge Psychiatry
Collaborative depression care model offers promise in rural practice
MDedge Psychiatry