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Obama, Romney offer different paths on Medicare, Social Security

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WASHINGTON (MCT) — They are two of the largest parts of the federal government. They’re growing. And they’re heading toward financial problems that will touch tens of millions of Americans unless something changes.

Medicare is the nation’s biggest buyer of health care, spending $550 billion last year to provide care for 48.7 million Americans. The problem is that the taxes paid by workers and employers to finance the program aren’t covering the full cost, and the government since 2008 has been drawing off its trust fund to make up the difference. Barring changes, the trust fund runs out in 12 years — 2024 — and the government would have to raise taxes or cut services.

Social Security, which provides benefits for 55 million people, is in better financial shape, but the funds that support it are projected to run out in 2033 — three years earlier than was predicted just last year.

President Barack Obama and Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney offer vastly different approaches to putting both popular programs on sound financial footing. Both offer more details for Medicare than Social Security.

Obama relies on the already enacted Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act — “Obamacare” — to fix the problem. Romney wants to repeal that law, and instead change the system starting in 2023 to give people a check to use to buy their insurance — either the existing Medicare coverage from the government or other coverage from a private insurer. If the insurance cost more, they’d have to make up the difference. If it cost less, they could keep the difference in a health care account.

Here’s what each candidates would do:

MEDICARE

Obama would:

—Use the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act to transform, trim and sustain Medicare.

—Reduce projected annual payments to health care providers and Medicare Advantage plans.

—Impose new fees on drug companies, medical device makers and insurers.

—Improve prescription drug coverage and pay for free preventative care.

Obama’s plan to restructure Medicare centers on the health care overhaul he signed into law in 2010, much of which has not yet been implemented.

First, his plan cuts projected Medicare spending by $716 billion from 2013 to 2022. The savings would come mainly from lower annual payment increases for hospitals and other care providers, higher premiums for affluent beneficiaries and lower payments to Medicare Advantage plans, the private plans that provide Medicare benefits, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation.

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