The Biden Plan for Older Americans
https://joebiden.com/older-americans/
The moral obligation of our time is rebuilding the middle class. The middle
class isn’t a number, it’s a value set. And, a key component of that value set
is having a steady, secure income as you age so your kids won’t have to take
care of you in retirement. This means not only protecting and strengthening
Social Security, but also helping more middle-class families grow their
savings.
A dignified retirement also means having access to affordable health care
and support. Too many Americans – and too many older Americans – cannot afford
their prescriptions or their long-term care. Their families are faced with
saving for their own retirement or taking care of their aging parents. It’s not
right.
Working- and middle-class Americans built this country. And, they deserve to
retire with dignity – able to pay for their prescriptions and with access to
quality, affordable long-term care.
I. STAND UP TO THE ABUSE OF POWER BY PRESCRIPTION DRUG CORPORATIONS
Too many Americans cannot afford their prescription drugs, and prescription
drug corporations are profiteering off of the pocketbooks of sick individuals.
The Biden Plan will put a stop to runaway drug prices and the profiteering of
the drug industry by:
- Repealing the outrageous
exception allowing drug corporations to avoid negotiating with Medicare
over drug prices. Because Medicare covers so many Americans, it has
significant leverage to negotiate lower prices for its beneficiaries. And
it does so for hospitals and other providers participating in the program
but not drug manufacturers. Drug manufacturers not facing any competition,
therefore, can charge whatever price they choose to set. There’s no
justification for this except the power of prescription drug lobbying. The
Biden Plan will repeal the existing law explicitly barring Medicare from
negotiating lower prices with drug corporations.
- Limiting launch prices for
drugs that face no competition and are being abusively priced by
manufacturers. Through his work on the Cancer Moonshot, Biden understands
that the future of pharmacological interventions is not traditional
chemical drugs, but specialized biotech drugs that will have little to no
competition to keep prices in check. Without competition, we need a new
approach for keeping the prices of these drugs down. For these cases where
new specialty drugs without competition are being launched, under the
Biden Plan the Secretary of Health and Human Services will establish an
independent review board to assess their value. The board will recommend a
reasonable price, based on the average price in other countries (a process
called external
reference pricing) or, if the drug is entering the U.S. market first,
based on an evaluation by the independent board members. This reasonable
price will be the rate Medicare and the public option will pay. In
addition, the Biden Plan will allow private plans participating in the
individual marketplace to access a similar rate.
- Limiting price increases for
all brand, biotech and abusively priced generic drugs to inflation. As a
condition of participation in the Medicare program and public option, all
brand, biotech and abusively priced generic drugs will be prohibited from
increasing their prices more than the general inflation rate. The Biden
plan will also impose a tax penalty on drug manufacturers that increase
the costs of their brand, biotech or abusively priced generic over the
general inflation rate.
- Allowing consumers to buy
prescription drugs from other countries. To create more competition for
U.S. drug corporations, the Biden Plan will allow consumers to import
prescription drugs from other countries, as long as the U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services has certified that those drugs are safe.
- Terminating pharmaceutical
corporations’ tax break for advertisement spending. Drug corporations
spent an estimated $6
billion in 2016 alone on prescription drug advertisements to increase
their sales, a more than four-fold increase from just $1.3 billion in
1997. The American Medical Association has even expressed “concerns
among physicians about the negative impact of commercially driven
promotions, and the role that marketing costs play in fueling escalating
drug prices.” Currently, drug corporations may count spending on these
ads as a deduction to reduce the amount of taxes they owe. But taxpayers
should not have to foot the bill for these ads. As president, Biden will
end this tax deduction for all prescription drug ads, as
proposed by Senator Jeanne Shaheen.
- Improving the supply of
quality generics. Generics help reduce health care spending, but brand
drug corporations have succeeded in preserving a number of strategies to
help them delay the entrance of a generic into the market even after the
patent has expired. The Biden Plan supports numerous proposals to accelerate
the development of safe generics, such as Senator
Patrick Leahy’s proposal to make sure generic manufacturers have
access to a sample.
II. PROTECT AND STRENGTHEN MEDICARE AS WE KNOW IT AND ENSURE QUALITY,
AFFORDABLE HEALTH CARE FOR ALL OLDER AMERICANS
On March 23, 2010, President Obama signed the Affordable Care Act into law,
with Vice President Biden standing by his side, and made history. It was a
victory 100 years in the making. It was the conclusion of a tough fight that
required taking on Republicans, special interests, and the status quo to do
what’s right. But the Obama-Biden Administration got it done.
Today, the Affordable Care Act is still a big deal – especially for older
Americans. Because of Obamacare, over 100
million people no longer have to worry that an insurance company
will deny coverage or charge higher premiums just because they have a pre-existing
condition – whether cancer or diabetes or heart disease or a mental
health challenge. Insurance companies can
no longer set annual or lifetime limits on coverage. The law limited
the extent to which insurance companies may charge you higher premiums just
because of your age. And, the Affordable Care Act strengthened Medicare by extending
the life of the Medicare Trust Fund; giving Medicare beneficiaries
access to free
recommended preventive services, such as an annual
wellness visit; and closing the prescription drug coverage gap,
often referred to as the “donut
hole.”
But, every day over the past nine years, the Affordable Care Act has been
under relentless attack.
Immediately after its passage, Congressional Republicans began trying again
and again to repeal it. Following
the lead of President Trump, Republicans in Congress have only
doubled down on this approach since January 2017. And, since repeal through
Congress has not been working, President Trump has been unilaterally doing
everything he can to sabotage the Affordable Care Act. Now, the Trump
Administration is trying to get the entire law – including protections for
people with pre-existing conditions – struck
down in court.
As president, Biden will protect the Affordable Care Act from these
continued attacks. He opposes every effort to get rid of this historic law –
including efforts by Republicans, and efforts by Democrats. Instead of starting
from scratch and getting rid of private insurance, he has a plan to build on
the Affordable Care Act by giving Americans more choice, reducing health
care costs, and making our health care system less complex to navigate.
You can read Biden’s full health care plan [here]. In
addition, to improve older Americans’ access to affordable, quality health
care, Biden will:
- Protect Medicare as we know
it. Today, Medicare provides health insurance coverage to over 60
million older Americans and people with disabilities. As
president, Biden will continue to defend our nation’s commitment to older
Americans and people with disabilities through Medicare, and he will keep
Medicare as a separate and distinct program, and ensure there is no
disruption to the current Medicare system.
- Protect Medicaid and ensure
its beneficiaries can access home and community-based long-term care when
they want it. Medicaid pays for more long-term care than any other insurer
in the country. In fact, roughly 6
in 10 individuals residing in nursing homes are enrolled in Medicaid,
including many older Americans. Yet, the Trump Administration is reportedly
considering a plan to cut Medicaid funding by turning it into a block
grant. And Republican leadership in states like Iowa, where Medicaid has
been privatized with devastating
results for some of its most vulnerable residents, are not fulfilling
their obligations under the program. The Biden Plan will protect Medicaid
funding and make sure the program gives those on Medicaid who need
long-term care the flexibility to choose home- and community-based care.
In addition, the Biden Administration won’t let states skirt their duties
under Medicaid and will take enforcement action against any state that
allows profiteering to get in the way of Medicaid beneficiaries’ health.
- Provide tax relief to help
solve the long-term care challenge. The Biden Plan will also help
Americans pay for long-term care by providing relief for Americans needing
long-term care by creating a $5,000 tax credit for informal caregivers,
modeled off of legislation
supported by AARP. These informal caregivers – whether family members
or other loved ones – have for too long been doing tireless work without
any financial support. In addition, Biden will increase the generosity of tax
benefits for older Americans who choose to buy long-term care
insurance and pay for it using their savings for retirement.
- Care for our caregivers. The
physical, emotional, and financial challenges of caring for a loved one is
enormous. As president, Biden will work to enact at the federal level the AARP-endorsed
Caregiver Advise, Record, Enable (CARE) Act, which has already been
passed in 39
states. This legislation will help our caregivers by ensuring
hospitals equip them with instructions and information when their loved
ones are discharged. Biden also supports additional proposals to support
caregivers, such as funding to give them access to respite
care.
III. PRESERVE AND STRENGTHEN SOCIAL SECURITY
Social Security is the bedrock of American retirement. Roughly
90% of retirement-age Americans receive Social Security benefits,
and one-in-four
rely on Social Security for all, or almost all, of their income. The program
has not only ensured that middle-class workers can enjoy the sound and secure
retirement they worked so hard for, it also lifted over
17 million older Americans out of poverty in 2017 alone.
The Biden Plan will protect Social Security for the millions of Americans
who depend on the program. With Social Security’s Trust Fund already in deficit
and
expected to be exhausted in 2035, we urgently need action to make
the program solvent and prevent cuts to American retirees.
But the Biden Plan doesn’t stop there. As president, Joe Biden will
strengthen benefits for the most vulnerable older Americans – including widows
and widowers, lifelong workers with low monthly benefits, and old-age
beneficiaries who may have exhausted their other savings. Specifically, the
Biden Plan will:
- Put Social Security on a path
to long-run solvency. The impending exhaustion of the Social Security
Trust fund imperils American retirement as we know it. Waiting to act only
jeopardizes the program further, and will make an eventual solution that
much more difficult. The Biden Plan will put the program on a path to
long-term solvency by asking Americans with especially high wages to pay
the same taxes on those earnings that middle-class families pay.
- Preserve the nature of Social
Security. Social Security is one of our nation’s great public policy successes,
in large part due to the fact that participation in the program is shared
across almost all workers. Efforts to privatize the program – such as an
approach suggested under the Bush Administration – will undermine the
program’s solvency, while putting at risk individuals’ income in
retirement. Similarly, proposals to make the program “means-tested” – so
that only low-income retirees workers receive benefits – jeopardizes the
program’s universal nature and key role as the bedrock of American retirement.
Ultimately, the success of Social Security is largely due to the fact that
almost all Americans can rely on the program to make their retirement more
secure.
- Provide a higher benefit for
the oldest Americans. At advanced ages, Americans become more vulnerable
to exhausting their savings, sometimes falling into poverty and living a
life of hardship. The Biden Plan will provide the oldest beneficiaries –
those who have been receiving retirement benefits for at
least 20 years – with a higher monthly check to help protect retirees
from the pain of dwindling retirement savings.
- Implement a true minimum
benefit for lifelong workers. No one who has worked for decades and paid
into Social Security should have to spend their retirement in poverty. The
Biden Plan will revolutionize the Social Security’s minimum benefit, which
has deteriorated over time to the point of being entirely ineffective.
Under the Biden Plan, workers who spent 30 years working will get a benefit
of at least 125% of the poverty level.
- Protect widows and widowers
from steep cuts in benefits. For many couples, the death of a spouse means
that Social Security benefits will be cut in half – putting pressure on
the surviving spouse who still needs to make the mortgage payment and
handle other bills. The Biden Plan will allow
surviving spouse to keep a higher share of the benefits. This will
make an appreciable difference in the finances of older Americans,
especially women (who live longer on average than men), raising the
monthly payment by about 20% for affected beneficiaries.
- Eliminate penalties for
teachers and other public-sector workers. Current rules penalize teachers
and other public sector workers who either switch jobs or who have earned
retirement benefits from various sources. The Biden Plan would eliminate
these penalties by ensuring that teachers not eligible for Social Security
will begin receiving benefits sooner – rather
than the current ten-year period for many teachers. The Biden Plan
will also get rid of the benefit cuts for workers and surviving
beneficiaries who happen to be covered by both Social Security and another
pension. These workers deserve the benefits they earned.
IV. EQUALIZE SAVING INCENTIVES FOR MIDDLE-CLASS WORKERS
In the modern retirement landscape, a sound retirement begins with years of
diligent saving. While other aspects of the Biden Plan will help raise wages
for workers and reduce costs for spending like child care and health insurance,
the Biden Plan will also ensure that middle-class families get a leg up as they
grow their nest egg.
Under current law, the tax code affords workers over
$200 billion each year for various retirement benefits – including
saving in 401(k)-type plans or IRAs. While these benefits help workers reach
their retirement goals, many are poorly designed to help low- and middle-income
savers – about two-thirds of the benefit goes to the wealthiest 20%
of families. The Biden Plan will make these savings more equal so
that middle class families can enter retirement with enough savings to support
a healthy and secure retirement. President Biden will do so by:
- Equalizing the tax benefits
of defined contribution plans. The current tax benefits for retirement
savings are based on the concept of deferral, whereby savers get to
exclude their retirement contributions from tax, see their savings grow
tax free, and then pay taxes when they withdraw money from their account.
This system provides upper-income families with a much stronger tax break
for saving and a limited benefit for middle-class and other workers with
lower earnings. The Biden Plan will equalize benefits across the income
scale, so that low- and middle-income workers will also get a tax break
when they put money away for retirement.
- Removing penalties for
caregivers who want to save for retirement. Under current law, people who
work as caregivers without receiving wages are ineligible to get tax
breaks for retirement saving. The Biden Plan will allow caregivers to make
“catch-up” contributions to retirement accounts, even if they’re not
earning income in the formal labor market, as has been proposed
in bipartisan legislation by Representatives Jackie Walorski and
Harley Rouda.
- Giving small businesses a tax
break for starting a retirement plan and giving workers the chance to save
at work. As proposed by the Obama-Biden Administration, the Biden Plan
will call for widespread adoption of workplace savings plans and offer tax
credits to small businesses to offset much of the costs. Under Biden’s
plan, almost all workers without a pension or 401(k)-type plan will have
access to an “automatic 401(k),” which provides the opportunity to easily
save for retirement at work – putting millions of middle-class families in
the path to a secure retirement.
V. PROVIDE HELP FOR OLDER WORKERS WHO WANT TO KEEP WORKING
With longer lifespans and the changing nature of work, many Americans are
choosing to stay in the workforce longer. Despite their valuable contributions,
these workers often face illegal discrimination or steep tax penalties when
they try to continue to earn a living. Joe Biden believes that all workers
deserve an opportunity to earn a living and will fight to change the laws to
allow all people – regardless of their age – to get the pay they deserve. The
Biden Plan will:
- Protect older Americans
against harmful age discrimination. As president, Biden will back
bipartisan legislation protecting older workers from being discriminated
against in the workforce. According
to an AARP survey, this practice is widespread – with more than 60% of
older workers reporting discrimination because of their age. The Biden
Plan will put in place workplace safeguards making it easier for older
workers to prove that they were treated unfairly at work.
- Expand the Earned Income Tax
Credit (EITC) to older workers. The EITC is one of the most effective
strategies for helping low-wage workers achieve a living wage.
Unfortunately, the EITC is not available to workers once they turn 65,
putting them at a distinct disadvantage relative to their younger peers.
As president, Joe Biden will allow low-wage older workers to claim the tax
credit they deserve.