The ‘Super Committee’ And The Devil You Know
Health care groups,聽nervous about聽the debt deal鈥檚 鈥溾 deliberations that begin next week, are likely to fare聽far better under a series of automatic cuts than any agreement the panel may reach. At least that’s the opinion of聽Washington insider Christopher Jennings, a former Clinton administration health care adviser.

“Washington鈥檚 governing precept is that the devil you know is preferable to the one you don鈥檛,” Jennings writes in a聽 piece published Wednesday聽in the .聽 He adds: 鈥渉ealth care stakeholders are beginning to conclude that any plan agreed on by the super committee would result in larger aggregate cuts and would have a greater negative impact.鈥
Such a plan would almost inevitably include 鈥渘ew and damaging鈥 Medicaid cuts, Jennings notes. That聽idea has been Medicaid advocates since the deal was first announced. While the entitlement program for the poor and disabled is protected in the automatic cuts, not so in the panel鈥檚 deliberations on a comprehensive package.
Doctors and hospitals聽also believe that the panel could well produce more extensive Medicare cuts beyond the 聽$130 billion to $150 billion that would be cut through the fallback plan.聽Some liberals have been thinking that the across-the-board 2 percent cut in the growth of Medicare spending may be the .
Patient groups 鈥渉ave virtually no reason to want the super committee to act鈥 since the automatic cuts explicity exempt seniors and the lowest-income Americans from paying more.鈥 Those groups, Jennings says, 鈥渁re highly skeptical that an alternative 鈥榖ig鈥 deal would be balanced and fair.”
A balance of polices to spur job growth and boost the economy combined with 鈥渁 thoughtful collection of payment and cost-sharing reforms” to boost聽Medicare and Medicaid,聽as well as a聽permanent answer to the yearly Medicare physician payment dilemma — — would be the ideal super committee compromise, Jennings says. He quickly adds it’s also聽unlikely: 聽“The choice is therefore not a close call; the automatic cuts are by far the best poison to be forced to take.”