Rivlin On Medicare And The Debt: ‘We Know What To Do’
Whoever ends up controlling the White House next year 鈥 Barack Obama or Mitt Romney —聽will have to make compromises if they are to solve the nation鈥檚 current budget and health care crises.

鈥淚 think we know what to do,鈥澛燗lice Rivlin, a former director of the Office of Management and Budget, said Friday afternoon as part of a Brookings Institution panel about how the next president could curb spiraling health care costs.
Rivlin,聽now a senior fellow at Brookings, wrote in a published Friday that the 鈥渇ederal budget is on an unsustainable path鈥 and Medicare reform is 鈥渆ssential鈥 to addressing these dire fiscal straits. She gave the concept of 鈥溾 a nod, offering this approach as a means of moving toward debt reduction. Her primary example was聽the bipartisan Domenici-Rivlin plan, which she drafted with former Sen. Pete Domenici in 2010. She also mentioned聽the Ryan-Wyden Medicare plan, advanced by House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan, R-Wis., and Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore.
Placing traditional Medicare in competition with private insurers is 鈥渘ot a risky, pernicious thing,鈥 Rivlin said during the panel. While much of this year鈥檚 election will focus on contrasting views over premium support, tax revenue and other areas, Rivlin expects bipartisan progress early next year.
Panelist Thomas Mann, also a聽Brookings senior fellow,聽argued that bipartisan consensus is not possible 鈥 鈥渋t鈥檚 a pipe dream,鈥 he said, underscoring comments from his own . Given the Republican party鈥檚 鈥渋deological extremism and non-negotiable demands,鈥 Mann wrote it would be better 鈥渢o accept the reality of today鈥檚 intense and asymmetric polarization and challenge each party to make its best case in the election campaign.鈥
Speaking generally about聽premium support models for Medicare, Mann said, 鈥渋t鈥檚 possible it could work,鈥 but he first wants to see if health insurance exchanges will help empower consumers to make smart choices. He was not enthusiastic about the Ryan-Wyden plan.
If the health law is upheld by the Supreme Court, Rivlin 聽wrote that the health law 鈥渟hould be fine-tuned but not repealed,鈥 pointing to provisions 鈥 like the exchanges 鈥 that should go forward regardless of who controls the White House. In addition, the law鈥檚 Independent Advisory Board 鈥渟hould be strengthened,鈥 she said. The board would help control costs, but has become a flashpoint for Republicans and an increasing number of Democrats.
Rivlin added that a 鈥渟ensible tort reform provision鈥 should be added to the law. This might include a push for medical practice guidelines or caps on payments. And if the individual mandate is struck down by the Supreme Court, 鈥渢he president should work with Congress to find a constitutional way to ensure that almost everyone has health insurance and is in a risk pool.鈥
Ross Hammond, another Brookings fellow, to Rivlin, calling for 鈥渁 renewed focus by the next president on obesity prevention.鈥 Chronic disease costs could be brought down through investing in public health research and improving coordination among government agencies, Hammond wrote.