CMS Predicts Health Care Spending Will Top $7 Trillion by 2031

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Oncology Nursing NewsAugust 2023

It is anticipated that health care spending will grow by an annual average of 5.4% over the next 8 years.

CMS Predicts Health Care Spending Will Top $7 Trillion by 2031

CMS Predicts Health Care Spending Will Top $7 Trillion by 2031

Government forecasts predict that the US will reach nearly $7.2 trillion, or about 20% of gross domestic product (GDP) in health care spending by 2031.

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), in its annual National Health Expenditure estimate released in June, predicts that health care spending will grow by an annual average of 5.4% over the next 8 years, while GDP growth will average 4.6% per year over the same period. That means health care spending’s share of GDP will rise to 19.6% from its 2022 level of 18.4%

Medicare will be the biggest driver of spending growth among payers, CMS says, averaging increases of 7.5% per year. Much of that will be due to baby boomers enrolling in the program through 2029. Spending through private health insurance and Medicaid is anticipated to increase by 5.4% and 5%, respectively, while growth in out-of-pocket payments is expected to average 4.3% annually during the period.

Among health care sectors, hospital spending is expected to grow the fastest at 5.8% per year on average. That will be followed by physician and clinical sectors at 5.3% and prescription drugs at 4.6%.

Spending on health care services within the major sectors is expected to outstrip price increases. While hospital spending is predicted to grow at a 5.8% annual rate, average price increases for hospitals will be 3.2%. Similarly, spending on physician and clinical services is expected to grow at a 5.3% annual rate, but prices will increase 2%. For prescription drugs, the predicted increases are 4.6% for spending and 2.2% for prices.

Spending for physician and clinical services is estimated to have grown by 2.4% in 2022, significantly slower than the 5.6% increase in 2021. CMS attributes the slowdown to people forgoing physician appointments because of the high rate of inflation throughout the economy, along with limited appointment availability and resulting long wait times.

The relatively modest increase forecast for prescription drug spending is due to provisions in the Inflation Reduction Act that “fundamentally altered the Part D [prescription drug] benefit by reducing…the program’s cost-sharing arrangements,” CMS says. Those changes include the first-ever requirement that the US Department of Health & Human Services negotiate prices for some high-cost drugs and linking price increases for certain drugs to increases in the Consumer Price Index. The effect will be to reduce cost sharing for Medicare beneficiaries.

CMS forecasts that the percentage of Americans with insurance coverage will peak this year at 92.3% then decrease to 90.5% by 2031. Much of that drop will be due to a decline in Medicaid enrollment from 90.4 million to 81.1 million, resulting from states’ tightening eligibility requirements following the expiration of the COVID-19 public health emergency.

Reference

National Health Expenditure fact sheet. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. June 14, 2023. Accessed June 27, 2023. https://bit.ly/3r2urvR

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