"M.O." stands for modus operandi and basically means "method of
work." You hear it on TV cop shows a lot as detectives try to
determine the patterns made by a criminal.
Lawmakers have an M.O., too, when it comes to bad policy-making,
according to Heritage Foundation health-care expert Derek
Hunter-and you can see it as they try to add prescription drugs as
a Medicare entitlement.
Hunter explains the bad policy M.O. in a forthcoming research
paper: Congress creates an entitlement with new obligations for
taxpayers. Lawmakers then find the new entitlement has "unintended
and very undesirable" consequences. To cope with those
consequences, lawmakers ask taxpayers for a quick fix to the
problem it (often unnecessarily) created in the first place.
In the case of prescription drugs, undesirable consequences include
roughly 4 million seniors losing their private drug coverage and
being forced into Medicare. The New York Times reported the quick
fix to this on Sept. 16: Some lawmakers are now proposing that
taxpayers shell out new subsidies for businesses to discourage them
from dropping their coverage of seniors should the entitlement
become law. These new subsidies or tax breaks are on top of the
cost for the entitlement itself, which is estimated to be up to
$432 billion in the first 10 years.
What the lawmakers propose may be legal, but taxpayers are being
robbed here.
For more information or to receive an e-mail version of
"Medicare Maladies," contact [email protected] or call
Heritage Media Services at (202) 675-1761.
Medicare Malady #47: Tracking The Bad Policy M.O.
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