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The group blog of The American Prospect

BUDGETEER KNIFE FIGHT CONTINUES.

The White House scored a point today in its ongoing battle to convince establishment Washington that health-care reform will succeed at cutting costs even as it expands coverage. The White House and budget director Peter Orszag, as well as the House Blue Dogs, are very bullish about allowing an independent board to pursue cost-cutting measures in Medicare. But when CBO scored the measure to determine if it would be succesful, they produced a very lukewarm estimate. Today, though, a group of health-care experts sent a letter [PDF] to Obama arguing that IMAC, the independent cost-cutting board, would be very effective if done right -- and nine of the signatories are members of the CBO's Panel of Health Advisers, nearly half the membership. It's a good sign for the White House, and will help push the message that, while CBO's scores are important, the assumptions made in that office are not carved in concrete.

Orszag himself wrote a post on the issue, saying that the health-care wonks "support of the IMAC proposal underscores what most serious health analysts have recognized for some time: that moving toward a health system emphasizing quality rather than quantity will require continual effort, and that a key objective of legislation should be to put in place structures (like the IMAC) that facilitate such change over time."

-- Tim Fernholz



COMMENTS

I still don't understand why doing this should be conditional on total health care reform. What is stopping Congress from approving IMAC as a stand-alone piece of legislation?

I mean, don't you want to see if cost-savings can be achieved on a smaller scale before you risk the country's financial health?

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