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1 Budgetary Effects of a Policy That Would Lower the Age of Eligibility for Medicare to 60 1 (May 16, 2022)

handle is hein.congrec/byefsot0001 and id is 1 raw text is: n this report, the Congressional Budget Office
discusses an estimate of the federal budgetary costs
of a policy that would lower the age of eligibility
for Medicare, largely reflecting current program
rules for people who would be newly eligible. The esti-
mate was prepared in conjunction with the staff of the
Joint Committee on Taxation (JCT). This report also
describes the resulting changes in the number of people
with health insurance coverage and the sources of that
coverage.
CBO and JCT estimate that lowering the age of
Medicare eligibility to 60 would increase federal bud-
get deficits by $155 billion over the 2026-2031 period
through the effects of that policy on federal revenues and
mandatory spending.1
Enacting the policy would have a significant effect on
primary sources of health insurance coverage, and it
would increase the number of people insured. According
to CBO's estimate, in 2031:
About 7.3 million more people would be enrolled in
both Medicare Part A and Medicare Part B as their
primary source of coverage.
About 3.2 million fewer people would have
employment-based insurance as their primary source
of coverage; most of those people would enroll in
Medicare.
About 1.8 million fewer people would have Medicaid
as their primary source of coverage; almost all of them
would enroll in Medicare.
1. Mandatory, or direct, spending includes outlays for some
federal benefit programs and for certain other payments to
people, businesses, nonprofit institutions, and state and local
governments. Such outlays are generally governed by statutory
criteria and are not normally constrained by the annual
appropriation process.

About 2.0 million fewer people would be enrolled
in nongroup coverage, and almost all of them would
enroll in Medicare instead.
About 0.4 million fewer people would be without
health insurance.
Those changes in health insurance coverage under the
policy would cause federal deficits to increase for three
main reasons:
Although spending on health care would decrease, on
average, for people with employment-based coverage
under current law (largely because Medicare generally
has lower payment rates for medical services), federal
costs would increase because a larger share of that
spending would be paid by the federal government
rather than employers.
Some people who are projected to be uninsured or
enrolled in unsubsidized nongroup coverage under
current law would instead have health insurance
coverage subsidized by the federal government.
Federal costs for people with Medicaid coverage
under current law would increase, primarily because
of greater spending on health care for people dually
eligible for Medicaid and Medicare and because a
greater share of those costs would be paid for by the
federal government rather than state governments.
Those costs would be partially offset by reductions in
Medicaid spending for people who would lose their
eligibility for Medicaid under the policy.
Description of the Policy
CBO and JCT analyzed a policy that would lower the
age of Medicare eligibility from 65 to 60. The policy
would be fully implemented beginning in calendar
year 2026, and it would largely maintain the current
program rules for those who would be newly eligible.

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