Medicare’s Chief Actuary Explains How The Government Double Spends Your Tax Dollars

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One of the principle objections to the Obama administration’s claims that Obamacare doesn’t add to the deficit is the fact that they’re double-counting revenues. And, indeed, that’s exactly what happens.

Yesterday at the American Enterprise Institute panel on Medicare, Chief Actuary Richard Foster tried to explain how the accounting works:

Transcript via Peter Suderman:

To use a simplified example, let’s say you as an individual have to pay an extra $100 in hospital insurance payroll taxes because of the Affordable Care Act. So an extra $100 in actual cash comes from you to the Treasury and it’s credited to the Hospital Insurance Trust Fund. We get a bond of $100 for it. The cash itself is still sitting there and it will be spent like that [makes a motion that indicates "very quickly"]. Money does not sit around long in the Treasury. It may well be spent to help pay for other Affordable Care Act provisions or anything else that it needs to be spent on. So your $100 is spent.

But I have a promise for the Hospital Insurance trust fund that any time I need that money back I can get it. So let’s say it was spent for other coverage expansions, and now three years later I need it back to help pay for hospital insurance costs. So I let Treasury know. They come up with $100 in cash plus the five dollars in interest they owe or whatever it might be and they give me that cash and I spend it.

So far we’ve had a need for $200—$100 for the coverage expansion and $100 for HI [the Hospital Insurance fund]. We spent $200. And I got my money back. But you only paid $100.

When I got my money back, Treasury had to raise that money some other way. They’d already spent your $100. And they had to raise it by further borrowing, or not spending some other $100, or raising a new tax for $100. So on the one hand, all this is nothing new. This is traditional trust fund accounting. It’s just the way it works through the lending and redeeming operation. On the other hand, if you’re going to spend $200, you need $200.

In other words, the government cooks the books to let them take in $100 in revenues and then spend it twice. Double accounting, and the sort of thing that would send people to jail in the private sector.

Suderman also says that the last part Foster’s explanation is significant. “It’s not just that traditional trust fund accounting is inaccurate,” he writes. “It’s that, by giving the government license to spend tax money twice, it frequently paves the way for more borrowing, higher taxes, and unplanned service cuts.”

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Rob Port
Rob Port is the editor of SayAnythingBlog.com. In 2011 he was a finalist for the Watch Dog of the Year from the Sam Adams Alliance and winner of the Americans For Prosperity Award for Online Excellence. He writes a weekly column for several North Dakota newspapers, and also serves as a policy fellow for the North Dakota Policy Council.
 
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