Medicare Program; Medicare Part B Monthly Actuarial Rates, Premium Rates, and Annual Deductible Beginning January 1, 2022, 64205-64214 [2021-25050]
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Dated: November 12, 2021.
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& Medicaid Services.
[FR Doc. 2021–25132 Filed 11–15–21; 11:15 am]
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[CMS–8079–N]
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Medicare Program; Medicare Part B
Monthly Actuarial Rates, Premium
Rates, and Annual Deductible
Beginning January 1, 2022
Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services (CMS), Department
of Health and Human Services (HHS).
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
This notice announces the
monthly actuarial rates for aged (age 65
and over) and disabled (under age 65)
beneficiaries enrolled in Part B of the
Medicare Supplementary Medical
Insurance (SMI) program beginning
January 1, 2022. In addition, this notice
announces the monthly premium for
aged and disabled beneficiaries, the
deductible for 2022, and the incomerelated monthly adjustment amounts to
be paid by beneficiaries with modified
adjusted gross income above certain
threshold amounts. The monthly
actuarial rates for 2022 are $334.20 for
aged enrollees and $368.90 for disabled
enrollees. The standard monthly Part B
premium rate for all enrollees for 2022
is $170.10, which is equal to 50 percent
of the monthly actuarial rate for aged
enrollees (or approximately 25 percent
of the expected average total cost of Part
B coverage for aged enrollees) plus the
$3.00 repayment amount required under
current law. (The 2021 standard
premium rate was $148.50, which
included the $3.00 repayment amount.)
The Part B deductible for 2022 is
$233.00 for all Part B beneficiaries. (The
2021 Part B deductible was $203.00.) If
a beneficiary has to pay an incomerelated monthly adjustment, he or she
will have to pay a total monthly
SUMMARY:
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premium of about 35, 50, 65, 80, or 85
percent of the total cost of Part B
coverage plus a repayment amount of
$4.20, $6.00, $7.80, $9.60, or $10.20,
respectively.
DATES: The premium and related
amounts announced in this notice are
effective on January 1, 2022.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: M.
Kent Clemens, (410) 786–6391.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
Part B is the voluntary portion of the
Medicare program that pays all or part
of the costs for physicians’ services;
outpatient hospital services; certain
home health services; services furnished
by rural health clinics, ambulatory
surgical centers, and comprehensive
outpatient rehabilitation facilities; and
certain other medical and health
services not covered by Medicare Part
A, Hospital Insurance. Medicare Part B
is available to individuals who are
entitled to Medicare Part A, as well as
to U.S. residents who have attained age
65 and are citizens and to aliens who
were lawfully admitted for permanent
residence and have resided in the
United States for 5 consecutive years.
Part B requires enrollment and payment
of monthly premiums, as described in
42 CFR part 407, subpart B, and part
408, respectively. The premiums paid
by (or on behalf of) all enrollees fund
approximately one-fourth of the total
incurred costs, and transfers from the
general fund of the Treasury pay
approximately three-fourths of these
costs.
The Secretary of the Department of
Health and Human Services (the
Secretary) is required by section 1839 of
the Social Security Act (the Act) to
announce the Part B monthly actuarial
rates for aged and disabled beneficiaries
as well as the monthly Part B premium.
The Part B annual deductible is
included because its determination is
directly linked to the aged actuarial rate.
The monthly actuarial rates for aged
and disabled enrollees are used to
determine the correct amount of general
revenue financing per beneficiary each
month. These amounts, according to
actuarial estimates, will equal,
respectively, one-half of the expected
average monthly cost of Part B for each
aged enrollee (age 65 or over) and onehalf of the expected average monthly
cost of Part B for each disabled enrollee
(under age 65).
The Part B deductible to be paid by
enrollees is also announced. Prior to the
Medicare Prescription Drug,
Improvement, and Modernization Act of
2003 (MMA) (Pub. L. 108–173), the Part
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B deductible was set in statute. After
setting the 2005 deductible amount at
$110, section 629 of the MMA
(amending section 1833(b) of the Act)
required that the Part B deductible be
indexed beginning in 2006. The
inflation factor to be used each year is
the annual percentage increase in the
Part B actuarial rate for enrollees age 65
and over. Specifically, the 2022 Part B
deductible is calculated by multiplying
the 2021 deductible by the ratio of the
2022 aged actuarial rate to the 2021 aged
actuarial rate. The amount determined
under this formula is then rounded to
the nearest $1.
The monthly Part B premium rate to
be paid by aged and disabled enrollees
is also announced. (Although the costs
to the program per disabled enrollee are
different than for the aged, the statute
provides that the two groups pay the
same premium amount.) Beginning with
the passage of section 203 of the Social
Security Amendments of 1972 (Pub. L.
92–603), the premium rate, which was
determined on a fiscal-year basis, was
limited to the lesser of the actuarial rate
for aged enrollees, or the current
monthly premium rate increased by the
same percentage as the most recent
general increase in monthly Title II
Social Security benefits.
However, the passage of section 124
of the Tax Equity and Fiscal
Responsibility Act of 1982 (TEFRA)
(Pub. L. 97–248) suspended this
premium determination process.
Section 124 of TEFRA changed the
premium basis to 50 percent of the
monthly actuarial rate for aged enrollees
(that is, 25 percent of program costs for
aged enrollees). Section 606 of the
Social Security Amendments of 1983
(Pub. L. 98–21), section 2302 of the
Deficit Reduction Act of 1984 (DEFRA
84) (Pub. L. 98–369), section 9313 of the
Consolidated Omnibus Budget
Reconciliation Act of 1985 (COBRA 85)
(Pub. L. 99–272), section 4080 of the
Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of
1987 (OBRA 87) (Pub. L. 100–203), and
section 6301 of the Omnibus Budget
Reconciliation Act of 1989 (OBRA 89)
(Pub. L. 101–239) extended the
provision that the premium be based on
50 percent of the monthly actuarial rate
for aged enrollees (that is, 25 percent of
program costs for aged enrollees). This
extension expired at the end of 1990.
The premium rate for 1991 through
1995 was legislated by section
1839(e)(1)(B) of the Act, as added by
section 4301 of the Omnibus Budget
Reconciliation Act of 1990 (OBRA 90)
(Pub. L. 101–508). In January 1996, the
premium determination basis would
have reverted to the method established
by the 1972 Social Security Act
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Amendments. However, section 13571
of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation
Act of 1993 (OBRA 93) (Pub. L. 103–66)
changed the premium basis to 50
percent of the monthly actuarial rate for
aged enrollees (that is, 25 percent of
program costs for aged enrollees) for
1996 through 1998.
Section 4571 of the Balanced Budget
Act of 1997 (BBA) (Pub. L. 105–33)
permanently extended the provision
that the premium be based on 50
percent of the monthly actuarial rate for
aged enrollees (that is, 25 percent of
program costs for aged enrollees).
The BBA included a further provision
affecting the calculation of the Part B
actuarial rates and premiums for 1998
through 2003. Section 4611 of the BBA
modified the home health benefit
payable under Part A for individuals
enrolled in Part B. Under this section,
beginning in 1998, expenditures for
home health services not considered
‘‘post-institutional’’ are payable under
Part B rather than Part A. However,
section 4611(e)(1) of the BBA required
that there be a transition from 1998
through 2002 for the aggregate amount
of the expenditures transferred from
Part A to Part B. Section 4611(e)(2) of
the BBA also provided a specific yearly
proportion for the transferred funds.
The proportions were one-sixth for
1998, one-third for 1999, one-half for
2000, two-thirds for 2001, and fivesixths for 2002. For the purpose of
determining the correct amount of
financing from general revenues of the
Federal Government, it was necessary to
include only these transitional amounts
in the monthly actuarial rates for both
aged and disabled enrollees, rather than
the total cost of the home health
services being transferred.
Section 4611(e)(3) of the BBA also
specified, for the purpose of
determining the premium, that the
monthly actuarial rate for enrollees age
65 and over be computed as though the
transition would occur for 1998 through
2003 and that one-seventh of the cost be
transferred in 1998, two-sevenths in
1999, three-sevenths in 2000, foursevenths in 2001, five-sevenths in 2002,
and six-sevenths in 2003. Therefore, the
transition period for incorporating this
home health transfer into the premium
was 7 years while the transition period
for including these services in the
actuarial rate was 6 years.
Section 811 of the MMA, which
amended section 1839 of the Act,
requires that, starting on January 1,
2007, the Part B premium a beneficiary
pays each month be based on his or her
annual income. Specifically, if a
beneficiary’s modified adjusted gross
income is greater than the legislated
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threshold amounts (for 2022, $91,000
for a beneficiary filing an individual
income tax return and $182,000 for a
beneficiary filing a joint tax return), the
beneficiary is responsible for a larger
portion of the estimated total cost of
Part B benefit coverage. In addition to
the standard 25-percent premium, these
beneficiaries now have to pay an
income-related monthly adjustment
amount. The MMA made no change to
the actuarial rate calculation, and the
standard premium, which will continue
to be paid by beneficiaries whose
modified adjusted gross income is
below the applicable thresholds, still
represents 25 percent of the estimated
total cost to the program of Part B
coverage for an aged enrollee. However,
depending on income and tax filing
status, a beneficiary can now be
responsible for 35, 50, 65, 80, or 85
percent of the estimated total cost of
Part B coverage, rather than 25 percent.
Section 402 of the Medicare Access and
CHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015
(MACRA) (Pub. L. 114–10) modified the
income thresholds beginning in 2018,
and section 53114 of the Bipartisan
Budget Act of 2018 (BBA of 2018) (Pub.
L. 115–123) further modified the income
thresholds beginning in 2019. For years
beginning in 2019, the BBA of 2018
established a new income threshold. If
a beneficiary’s modified adjusted gross
income is greater than or equal to
$500,000 for a beneficiary filing an
individual income tax return and
$750,000 for a beneficiary filing a joint
tax return, the beneficiary is responsible
for 85 percent of the estimated total cost
of Part B coverage. The BBA of 2018
specified that these new income
threshold levels be inflation-adjusted
beginning in 2028. The end result of the
higher premium is that the Part B
premium subsidy is reduced, and less
general revenue financing is required,
for beneficiaries with higher income
because they are paying a larger share of
the total cost with their premium. That
is, the premium subsidy continues to be
approximately 75 percent for
beneficiaries with income below the
applicable income thresholds, but it will
be reduced for beneficiaries with
income above these thresholds. The
MMA specified that there be a 5-year
transition period to reach full
implementation of this provision.
However, section 5111 of the Deficit
Reduction Act of 2005 (DRA) (Pub. L.
109–171) modified the transition to a 3year period.
Section 4732(c) of the BBA added
section 1933(c) of the Act, which
required the Secretary to allocate money
from the Part B trust fund to the State
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Medicaid programs for the purpose of
providing Medicare Part B premium
assistance from 1998 through 2002 for
the low-income Medicaid beneficiaries
who qualify under section 1933 of the
Act. This allocation, while not a benefit
expenditure, was an expenditure of the
trust fund and was included in
calculating the Part B actuarial rates
through 2002. For 2003 through 2015,
the expenditure was made from the trust
fund because the allocation was
temporarily extended. However,
because the extension occurred after the
financing was determined, the
allocation was not included in the
calculation of the financing rates for
these years. Section 211 of MACRA
permanently extended this expenditure,
which is included in the calculation of
the Part B actuarial rates for 2016 and
subsequent years.
Another provision affecting the
calculation of the Part B premium is
section 1839(f) of the Act, as amended
by section 211 of the Medicare
Catastrophic Coverage Act of 1988
(MCCA 88) (Pub. L. 100–360). (The
Medicare Catastrophic Coverage Repeal
Act of 1989 (Pub. L. 101–234) did not
repeal the revisions to section 1839(f) of
the Act made by MCCA 88.) Section
1839(f) of the Act, referred to as the
‘‘hold-harmless’’ provision, provides
that, if an individual is entitled to
benefits under section 202 or 223 of the
Act (the Old-Age and Survivors
Insurance Benefit and the Disability
Insurance Benefit, respectively) and has
the Part B premium deducted from these
benefit payments, the premium increase
will be reduced, if necessary, to avoid
causing a decrease in the individual’s
net monthly payment. This decrease in
payment occurs if the increase in the
individual’s Social Security benefit due
to the cost-of-living adjustment under
section 215(i) of the Act is less than the
increase in the premium. Specifically,
the reduction in the premium amount
applies if the individual is entitled to
benefits under section 202 or 223 of the
Act for November and December of a
particular year and the individual’s Part
B premiums for December and the
following January are deducted from the
respective month’s section 202 or 223
benefits. The hold-harmless provision
does not apply to beneficiaries who are
required to pay an income-related
monthly adjustment amount.
A check for benefits under section 202
or 223 of the Act is received in the
month following the month for which
the benefits are due. The Part B
premium that is deducted from a
particular check is the Part B payment
for the month in which the check is
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received. Therefore, a benefit check for
November is not received until
December, but December’s Part B
premium has been deducted from it.
Generally, if a beneficiary qualifies for
hold-harmless protection, the reduced
premium for the individual for that
January and for each of the succeeding
11 months is the greater of either—
• The monthly premium for January
reduced as necessary to make the
December monthly benefits, after the
deduction of the Part B premium for
January, at least equal to the preceding
November’s monthly benefits, after the
deduction of the Part B premium for
December; or
• The monthly premium for that
individual for that December.
In determining the premium
limitations under section 1839(f) of the
Act, the monthly benefits to which an
individual is entitled under section 202
or 223 of the Act do not include
retroactive adjustments or payments and
deductions on account of work. Also,
once the monthly premium amount is
established under section 1839(f) of the
Act, it will not be changed during the
year even if there are retroactive
adjustments or payments and
deductions on account of work that
apply to the individual’s monthly
benefits.
Individuals who have enrolled in Part
B late or who have re-enrolled after the
termination of a coverage period are
subject to an increased premium under
section 1839(b) of the Act. The increase
is a percentage of the premium and is
based on the new premium rate before
any reductions under section 1839(f) of
the Act are made.
Section 1839 of the Act, as amended
by section 601(a) of the Bipartisan
Budget Act of 2015 (Pub. L. 114–74),
specified that the 2016 actuarial rate for
enrollees age 65 and older be
determined as if the hold-harmless
provision did not apply. The premium
revenue that was lost by using the
resulting lower premium (excluding the
forgone income-related premium
revenue) was replaced by a transfer of
general revenue from the Treasury,
which will be repaid over time to the
general fund.
Similarly, section 1839 of the Act, as
amended by section 2401 of the
Continuing Appropriations Act, 2021
and Other Extensions Act (Pub. L. 116–
159), specified that the 2021 actuarial
rate for enrollees age 65 and older be
determined as the sum of the 2020
actuarial rate for enrollees age 65 and
older and one-fourth of the difference
between the 2020 actuarial rate and the
preliminary 2021 actuarial rate (as
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determined by the Secretary) for such
enrollees. The premium revenue lost by
using the resulting lower premium
(excluding the forgone income-related
premium revenue) was replaced by a
transfer of general revenue from the
Treasury, which will be repaid over
time.
Starting in 2016, in order to repay the
balance due (which includes the
transfer amounts and the forgone
income-related premium revenue from
the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015 and
the Continuing Appropriations Act,
2021 and Other Extensions Act), the
Part B premium otherwise determined
will be increased by $3.00. These
repayment amounts will be added to the
Part B premium otherwise determined
each year and will be paid back to the
general fund of the Treasury, and they
will continue until the balance due is
paid back.
High-income enrollees pay the $3
repayment amount plus an additional
$1.20, $3.00, $4.80, $6.60, or $7.20 in
repayment as part of the income-related
monthly adjustment amount (IRMAA)
premium dollars, which reduce (dollar
for dollar) the amount of general
revenue received by Part B from the
general fund of the Treasury. Because of
this general revenue offset, the
repayment IRMAA premium dollars are
not included in the direct repayments
made to the general fund of the Treasury
from Part B in order to avoid a double
repayment. (Only the $3.00 monthly
repayment amounts are included in the
direct repayments).
These repayment amounts will
continue until the balance due is zero.
(In the final year of the repayment, the
additional amounts may be modified to
avoid an overpayment.) The repayment
amounts (excluding those for highincome enrollees) are subject to the
hold-harmless provision. The original
balance due was $9,066,409,000,
consisting of $1,625,761,000 in forgone
income-related premium revenue plus a
transfer amount of $7,440,648,000 from
the provisions of the Bipartisan Budget
Act of 2015. The increase in the balance
due in 2021 was $8,799,829,000,
consisting of $946,046,000 in forgone
income-related premium income plus a
transfer amount of $7,853,783,000 from
the provisions of the Continuing
Appropriations Act, 2021 and Other
Extensions Act. An estimated
$8,891,766,000 will have been collected
for repayment to the general fund by the
end of 2021.
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II. Provisions of the Notice
under age 65. In section II.B. of this
notice, we present the actuarial
assumptions and bases from which
these rates are derived. The Part B
standard monthly premium rate for all
enrollees for 2022 is $170.10.
The following are the 2022 Part B
monthly premium rates to be paid by (or
A. Notice of Medicare Part B Monthly
Actuarial Rates, Monthly Premium
Rates, and Annual Deductible
The Medicare Part B monthly
actuarial rates applicable for 2022 are
$334.20 for enrollees age 65 and over
and $368.90 for disabled enrollees
on behalf of) beneficiaries who file
either individual tax returns (and are
single individuals, heads of households,
qualifying widows or widowers with
dependent children, or married
individuals filing separately who lived
apart from their spouses for the entire
taxable year) or joint tax returns.
Beneficiaries who file individual tax returns with modified
adjusted gross income:
Beneficiaries who file joint tax returns with modified
adjusted gross income:
Less than or equal to $91,000 ..............................................
Greater than $91,000 and less than or equal to $114,000 ..
Greater than $114,000 and less than or equal to $142,000
Greater than $142,000 and less than or equal to $170,000
Greater than $170,000 and less than $500,000 ...................
Greater than or equal to $500,000 ........................................
Less than or equal to $182,000 ............................................
Greater than $182,000 and less than or equal to $228,000
Greater than $228,000 and less than or equal to $284,000
Greater than $284,000 and less than or equal to $340,000
Greater than $340,000 and less than $750,000 ..................
Greater than or equal to $750,000 .......................................
In addition, the monthly premium
rates to be paid by (or on behalf of)
beneficiaries who are married and lived
with their spouses at any time during
the taxable year, but who file separate
Income-related
monthly adjustment
amount
$0.00
68.00
170.10
272.20
374.20
408.20
Income-related
monthly adjustment
amount
Less than or equal to $91,000 ..................................................................................................................................................
Greater than $91,000 and less than $409,000 .........................................................................................................................
Greater than or equal to $409,000 ...........................................................................................................................................
B. Statement of Actuarial Assumptions
and Bases Employed in Determining the
Monthly Actuarial Rates and the
Monthly Premium Rate for Part B
Beginning January 2022
The actuarial assumptions and bases
used to determine the monthly actuarial
rates and the monthly premium rates for
Part B are established by the Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services’ Office of
the Actuary. The estimates underlying
these determinations are prepared by
actuaries meeting the qualification
standards and following the actuarial
standards of practice established by the
Actuarial Standards Board.
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1. Actuarial Status of the Part B Account
in the Supplementary Medical
Insurance Trust Fund
Under section 1839 of the Act, the
starting point for determining the
standard monthly premium is the
amount that would be necessary to
finance Part B on an incurred basis. This
is the amount of income that would be
sufficient to pay for services furnished
during that year (including associated
administrative costs) even though
payment for some of these services will
not be made until after the close of the
year. The portion of income required to
cover benefits not paid until after the
close of the year is added to the trust
fund and used when needed.
Because the premium rates are
established prospectively, they are
subject to projection error. Additionally,
legislation enacted after the financing
was established, but effective for the
period in which the financing is set,
may affect program costs. As a result,
the income to the program may not
equal incurred costs. Trust fund assets
must therefore be maintained at a level
that is adequate to cover an appropriate
degree of variation between actual and
projected costs, and the amount of
incurred, but unpaid, expenses.
Numerous factors determine what level
of assets is appropriate to cover
variation between actual and projected
costs. For 2022, the five most important
of these factors are (1) the impact of the
COVID–19 pandemic on program
$170.10
238.10
340.20
442.30
544.30
578.30
tax returns from their spouses, are as
follows:
Beneficiaries who are married and lived with their spouses at any time during the year, but who file separate tax returns
from their spouses, with modified adjusted gross income:
The Part B annual deductible for 2022
is $233.00 for all beneficiaries.
Total monthly
premium amount
$0.00
374.20
408.20
Total monthly
premium amount
$170.10
544.30
578.30
spending; (2) the impact on program
spending of Aduhelm (aducanumabavwa), the drug newly approved by the
Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
for treatment of Alzheimer’s disease; (3)
the difference from prior years between
the actual performance of the program
and estimates made at the time
financing was established; (4) the
likelihood and potential magnitude of
expenditure changes resulting from
enactment of legislation affecting Part B
costs in a year subsequent to the
establishment of financing for that year;
and (5) the expected relationship
between incurred and cash
expenditures. The first two factors, the
impacts of the pandemic and of
Aduhelm on program spending, bring a
higher-than-usual degree of uncertainty
to projected costs for the 2022 Part B
financing. The other three factors are
analyzed on an ongoing basis, as the
trends can vary over time.
Table 1 summarizes the estimated
actuarial status of the trust fund as of
the end of the financing period for 2020
and 2021.
TABLE 1—ESTIMATED ACTUARIAL STATUS OF THE PART B ACCOUNT IN THE SUPPLEMENTARY MEDICAL INSURANCE TRUST
FUND AS OF THE END OF THE FINANCING PERIOD
Assets
(in millions)
Financing period ending
December 31, 2020 .............................................................................................
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Liabilities 1
(in millions)
$133,283
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$42,000
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Assets less
liabilities1
(in millions)
$91,283
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64209
TABLE 1—ESTIMATED ACTUARIAL STATUS OF THE PART B ACCOUNT IN THE SUPPLEMENTARY MEDICAL INSURANCE TRUST
FUND AS OF THE END OF THE FINANCING PERIOD—Continued
Liabilities 1
(in millions)
Assets
(in millions)
Financing period ending
December 31, 2021 .............................................................................................
153,017
49,721
Assets less
liabilities1
(in millions)
103,296
1 These
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with NOTICES
amounts include only items incurred but not paid. They do not include the amounts that are to be paid back to the general fund of the
Treasury over time as specified by section 1839 of the Act as amended by section 601(a) of the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015 and further
amended by section 2401 of the Continuing Appropriations Act, 2021 and Other Extensions Act, or the Accelerated and Advance Payments Program amounts that are to be repaid by providers and returned to the general fund of the Treasury.
2. Monthly Actuarial Rate for Enrollees
Age 65 and Older
The monthly actuarial rate for
enrollees age 65 and older is one-half of
the sum of monthly amounts for (1) the
projected cost of benefits and (2)
administrative expenses for each
enrollee age 65 and older, after
adjustments to this sum to allow for
interest earnings on assets in the trust
fund and an adequate contingency
margin. The contingency margin is an
amount appropriate to provide for
possible variation between actual and
projected costs and to amortize any
surplus assets or unfunded liabilities.
The monthly actuarial rate for
enrollees age 65 and older for 2022 is
determined by first establishing per
enrollee costs by type of service from
program data through 2020 and then
projecting these costs for subsequent
years. The projection factors used for
financing periods from January 1, 2019
through December 31, 2022 are shown
in Table 2.
As indicated in Table 3, the projected
per enrollee amount required to pay for
one-half of the total of benefits and
administrative costs for enrollees age 65
and over for 2022 is $317.68. Based on
current estimates, the assets at the end
of 2021 are not sufficient to cover the
amount of incurred, but unpaid,
expenses, to provide for substantial
variation between actual and projected
costs, and to accommodate the
unusually high degree of uncertainty for
program costs due to the drug Aduhelm
and the COVID–19 pandemic. Thus, a
positive contingency margin is needed
to increase assets to a more appropriate
level. The monthly actuarial rate of
$334.20 provides an adjustment of
$18.67 for a contingency margin and
¥$2.15 for interest earnings.
The contingency margin for 2022 is
affected by several factors. First, as
noted previously, Aduhelm is a drug
newly approved by the FDA for the
treatment of Alzheimer’s disease. The
annual cost per patient for a course of
treatment is reported to be $56,000 for
the drug plus the additional costs for the
associated administration, diagnosis,
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testing, and monitoring. The program
cost of potential Medicare coverage of
Aduhelm would be paid from the Part
B account of the Supplemental Medical
Insurance Trust Fund. Depending on
utilization, the potential costs for this
course of treatment range from
negligible to very significant. To ensure
that Part B is able to pay claims in full
and on time, the Part B financing must
be sufficient to provide for a realistic
high-cost scenario of Aduhelm coverage.
The contingency margin has been
increased to accommodate this risk.
Second, in order to take the
uncertainty and potential impact of the
COVID–19 pandemic into account,
assumptions were developed for testing
and treatment for COVID–19, utilization
of non-COVID-related care, potential
costs for COVID–19 vaccines, and
possible paths of the pandemic. The
Part B projected program costs were
developed based on these assumptions
and were included in the margin
development.
Third, starting in 2011, manufacturers
and importers of brand-name
prescription drugs pay a fee that is
allocated to the Part B account of the
SMI trust. For 2022, the total of these
brand-name drug fees are estimated to
be $2.8 billion. The contingency margin
for 2022 has been reduced to account for
this additional revenue.
The traditional goal for the Part B
reserve has been that assets minus
liabilities at the end of a year should
represent between 15 and 20 percent of
the following year’s total incurred
expenditures. To accomplish this goal, a
17-percent reserve ratio, which is a fully
adequate contingency reserve level, has
been the normal target used to calculate
the Part B premium. The financing rates
for 2022 are set above the normal target
due to the higher-than-usual uncertainty
for 2022. The actuarial rate of $334.20
per month for aged beneficiaries, as
announced in this notice for 2022,
reflects the combined effect of the
factors and legislation previously
described and the projected
assumptions listed in Table 2.
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3. Monthly Actuarial Rate for Disabled
Enrollees
Disabled enrollees are those persons
under age 65 who are enrolled in Part
B because of entitlement to Social
Security disability benefits for more
than 24 months or because of
entitlement to Medicare under the endstage renal disease (ESRD) program.
Projected monthly costs for disabled
enrollees (other than those with ESRD)
are prepared in a manner parallel to the
projection for the aged using
appropriate actuarial assumptions (see
Table 2). Costs for the ESRD program are
projected differently because of the
different nature of services offered by
the program.
As shown in Table 4, the projected
per enrollee amount required to pay for
one-half of the total of benefits and
administrative costs for disabled
enrollees for 2022 is $389.63. The
monthly actuarial rate of $368.90 also
provides an adjustment of ¥$2.66 for
interest earnings and ¥$18.07 for a
contingency margin, reflecting the same
factors and legislation described
previously for the aged actuarial rate at
magnitudes applicable to the disabled
rate determination. Potential Medicare
coverage of the drug Aduhelm is
expected to have a negligible impact on
program costs for disabled enrollees as
the vast majority of the population with
Alzheimer’s disease is age 65 and older.
Based on current estimates, the assets
associated with the disabled Medicare
beneficiaries at the end of 2021 are
sufficient to cover the amount of
incurred, but unpaid, expenses and to
provide for a significant degree of
variation between actual and projected
costs.
The actuarial rate of $368.90 per
month for disabled beneficiaries, as
announced in this notice for 2022,
reflects the combined net effect of the
factors and legislation described
previously for aged beneficiaries and the
projection assumptions listed in Table
2.
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4. Sensitivity Testing
Several factors contribute to
uncertainty about future trends in
medical care costs. It is appropriate to
test the adequacy of the rates using
alternative cost growth rate
assumptions, the results of which are
shown in Table 5. One set represents
increases that are higher and, therefore,
more pessimistic than the current
estimate, and the other set represents
increases that are lower and, therefore,
more optimistic than the current
estimate. The values for the alternative
assumptions were determined from a
statistical analysis of the historical
variation in the respective increase
factors. The historical variation may not
be representative of the current level of
uncertainty due to the COVID–19
pandemic and the Alzheimer’s drug
Aduhelm.
As indicated in Table 5, the monthly
actuarial rates would result in an excess
of assets over liabilities of $120,442
million by the end of December 2022
under the cost growth rate assumptions
shown in Table 2 and under the
assumption that the provisions of
current law are fully implemented. This
result amounts to 23.7 percent of the
estimated total incurred expenditures
for the following year.
Assumptions that are somewhat more
pessimistic (and that therefore test the
adequacy of the assets to accommodate
projection errors) produce a surplus of
$67,927 million by the end of December
2022 under current law, which amounts
to 11.9 percent of the estimated total
incurred expenditures for the following
year. Under fairly optimistic
assumptions, the monthly actuarial rates
would result in a surplus of $198,532
million by the end of December 2022, or
44.6 percent of the estimated total
incurred expenditures for the following
year.
The sensitivity analysis indicates that,
in a typical year, the premium and
general revenue financing established
for 2022, together with existing Part B
account assets, would be adequate to
cover estimated Part B costs for 2022
under current law, should actual costs
prove to be somewhat greater than
expected. However, the current level of
uncertainty due to the pandemic and
Aduhelm may differ from the historical
variation included in this analysis.
5. Premium Rates and Deductible
As determined in accordance with
section 1839 of the Act, the following
are the 2022 Part B monthly premium
rates to be paid by beneficiaries who file
either individual tax returns (and are
single individuals, heads of households,
qualifying widows or widowers with
dependent children, or married
individuals filing separately who lived
apart from their spouses for the entire
taxable year) or joint tax returns.
Income-related
monthly adjustment
amount
Beneficiaries who file individual tax returns with
modified adjusted gross income:
Beneficiaries who file joint tax returns with modified
adjusted gross income:
Less than or equal to $91,000 ..............................................
Greater than $91,000 and less than or equal to $114,000 ..
Greater than $114,000 and less than or equal to $142,000
Greater than $142,000 and less than or equal to $170,000
Greater than $170,000 and less than $500,000 ...................
Greater than or equal to $500,000 ........................................
Less than or equal to $182,000 ............................................
Greater than $182,000 and less than or equal to $228,000
Greater than $228,000 and less than or equal to $284,000
Greater than $284,000 and less than or equal to $340,000
Greater than $340,000 and less than $750,000 ..................
Greater than or equal to $750,000 .......................................
In addition, the monthly premium
rates to be paid by beneficiaries who are
married and lived with their spouses at
any time during the taxable year, but
Total monthly
premium amount
$0.00
68.00
170.10
272.20
374.20
408.20
$170.10
238.10
340.20
442.30
544.30
578.30
who file separate tax returns from their
spouses, are as follows:
Income-related
monthly adjustment
amount
Beneficiaries who are married and lived with their spouses at any time during the year, but who file separate tax returns
from their spouses, with modified adjusted gross income:
Less than or equal to $91,000 ..................................................................................................................................................
Greater than $91,000 and less than $409,000 .........................................................................................................................
Greater than or equal to $409,000 ...........................................................................................................................................
Total monthly
premium amount
$0.00
374.20
408.20
$170.10
544.30
578.30
TABLE 2—PROJECTION FACTORS 1
[12–Month periods ending December 31 of 2019–2022 (in percent)]
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with NOTICES
Calendar year
(CY)
Aged:
2019
2020
2021
2022
Disabled:
2019
2020
2021
2022
Physician
fee
schedule
Durable
medical
equipment
Carrier
lab 2
Physicianadministered
drugs
Other
carrier
services 3
Outpatient
hospital
Home
health
agency
Hospital
lab 4
Other
intermediary
services 5
Managed
care
...............................
...............................
...............................
...............................
4.1
¥11.3
20.9
¥0.3
7.4
2.7
2.5
2.4
4.6
8.1
8.4
¥5.8
11.2
4.2
14.9
11.5
2.4
¥0.3
6.2
4.3
5.4
¥7.8
23.6
9.2
0.9
¥11.0
17.2
4.3
¥3.5
10.6
5.1
¥6.1
5.7
¥5.0
6.7
5.5
8.1
8.6
5.5
3.7
...............................
...............................
...............................
...............................
3.2
¥8.3
16.8
¥0.1
3.1
¥0.4
1.1
2.6
8.2
¥7.2
8.1
¥5.9
9.2
9.2
16.9
11.8
3.4
8.4
2.4
4.9
4.3
¥9.2
18.5
9.8
1.9
¥11.1
23.3
7.7
¥1.7
9.6
6.6
¥6.1
10.5
¥2.3
12.8
8.2
8.1
9.7
5.6
3.8
1 All
values for services other than managed care are per fee-for-service enrollee. Managed care values are per managed care enrollee.
services paid under the lab fee schedule furnished in the physician’s office or an independent lab.
3 Includes ambulatory surgical center facility costs, ambulance services, parenteral and enteral drug costs, supplies, etc.
4 Includes services paid under the lab fee schedule furnished in the outpatient department of a hospital.
5 Includes services furnished in dialysis facilities, rural health clinics, federally qualified health centers, rehabilitation and psychiatric hospitals, etc.
2 Includes
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64211
TABLE 3—DERIVATION OF MONTHLY ACTUARIAL RATE FOR ENROLLEES AGE 65 AND OVER FOR FINANCING PERIODS
ENDING DECEMBER 31, 2019 THROUGH DECEMBER 31, 2022
CY 2019
Covered services (at level recognized):
Physician fee schedule .............................................................................
Durable medical equipment ......................................................................
Carrier lab 1 ...............................................................................................
Physician-administered drugs ..................................................................
Other carrier services 2 .............................................................................
Outpatient hospital ....................................................................................
Home health agency ................................................................................
Hospital lab 3 .............................................................................................
Other intermediary services 4 ...................................................................
Managed care ...........................................................................................
CY 2020
CY 2021
CY 2022
$73.10
6.32
4.35
17.37
9.29
50.83
8.70
2.04
19.12
113.35
$62.11
6.21
4.51
17.34
8.87
44.89
7.41
2.16
17.40
130.43
$70.96
6.02
4.62
20.68
8.91
52.46
8.21
2.15
17.55
147.20
$68.60
5.98
4.22
24.56
9.01
55.52
8.30
1.95
17.94
157.93
304.47
301.33
338.75
354.02
¥6.32
¥28.74
¥5.38
¥6.75
¥25.73
¥1.79
¥6.93
¥29.74
0.00
¥7.94
¥26.06
¥6.31
Total benefits ............................................................................................
Administrative expenses ..................................................................................
Incurred expenditures ......................................................................................
Value of interest ...............................................................................................
Contingency margin for projection error and to amortize the surplus or deficit 5 ...............................................................................................................
264.02
4.11
268.14
¥1.89
267.06
4.40
271.46
¥1.33
302.08
4.33
306.41
¥1.64
313.70
3.98
317.68
¥2.15
¥1.35
13.07
¥13.77
18.67
Monthly actuarial rate ...............................................................................
264.90
283.20
291.00
334.20
Total services ....................................................................................
Cost sharing:
Deductible .................................................................................................
Coinsurance ..............................................................................................
Sequestration of benefits .................................................................................
1 Includes
services paid under the lab fee schedule furnished in the physician’s office or an independent lab.
ambulatory surgical center facility costs, ambulance services, parenteral and enteral drug costs, supplies, etc.
services paid under the lab fee schedule furnished in the outpatient department of a hospital.
4 Includes services furnished in dialysis facilities, rural health clinics, federally qualified health centers, rehabilitation and psychiatric hospitals,
etc.
5 The significant negative margin included in the 2021 actuarial rate is attributable to the application of the provisions of the Continuing Appropriations Act, 2021 and Other Extensions Act.
2 Includes
3 Includes
TABLE 4—DERIVATION OF MONTHLY ACTUARIAL RATE FOR DISABLED ENROLLEES FOR FINANCING PERIODS ENDING
DECEMBER 31, 2019 THROUGH DECEMBER 31, 2022
CY 2019
Covered services (at level recognized):
Physician fee schedule .............................................................................
Durable medical equipment ......................................................................
Carrier lab 1 ...............................................................................................
Physician-administered drugs ..................................................................
Other carrier services 2 .............................................................................
Outpatient hospital ....................................................................................
Home health agency ................................................................................
Hospital lab 3 .............................................................................................
Other intermediary services 4 ...................................................................
Managed care ...........................................................................................
CY 2021
CY 2022
$72.64
12.00
6.00
15.49
12.37
65.12
6.83
2.48
53.01
124.51
$62.39
11.06
5.34
15.58
12.42
54.88
5.61
2.54
49.88
151.94
$67.69
10.29
5.33
18.59
11.81
60.42
6.35
2.51
48.04
179.62
$62.92
9.78
4.65
20.15
11.52
61.44
6.32
2.19
49.64
202.67
370.42
371.64
410.66
431.27
¥6.15
¥41.62
¥6.45
¥6.56
¥37.05
¥2.19
¥6.75
¥39.25
0.00
¥7.73
¥33.68
¥7.74
Total benefits .....................................................................................
Administrative expenses ..................................................................................
Incurred expenditures ......................................................................................
Value of interest ...............................................................................................
Contingency margin for projection error and to amortize the surplus or deficit 5 ...............................................................................................................
316.21
4.93
321.14
¥2.52
325.84
5.37
331.21
¥1.65
364.65
7.39
372.04
¥2.04
382.12
7.51
389.63
¥2.66
¥3.21
14.04
¥20.10
¥18.07
Monthly actuarial rate ...............................................................................
315.40
343.60
349.90
368.90
Total services ....................................................................................
Cost sharing:
Deductible .................................................................................................
Coinsurance ..............................................................................................
Sequestration of benefits .................................................................................
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with NOTICES
CY 2020
1 Includes
services paid under the lab fee schedule furnished in the physician’s office or an independent lab.
ambulatory surgical center facility costs, ambulance services, parenteral and enteral drug costs, supplies, etc.
services paid under the lab fee schedule furnished in the outpatient department of a hospital.
4 Includes services furnished in dialysis facilities, rural health clinics, federally qualified health centers, rehabilitation and psychiatric hospitals,
etc.
2 Includes
3 Includes
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5 The significant negative margin included in the 2021 actuarial rate is attributable to the application of the provisions of the Continuing Appropriations Act, 2021 and Other Extensions Act.
TABLE 5—ACTUARIAL STATUS OF THE PART B ACCOUNT IN THE SMI TRUST FUND UNDER THREE SETS OF ASSUMPTIONS
FOR FINANCING PERIODS THROUGH DECEMBER 31, 2022
As of December 31,
2020
Actuarial status (in millions):
Assets ...................................................................................................................................
Liabilities ...............................................................................................................................
Assets less liabilities .............................................................................................................
Ratio 1 ...................................................................................................................................
Low-cost projection:
Actuarial status (in millions):
Assets ............................................................................................................................
Liabilities ........................................................................................................................
2022
$133,283
$42,000
$153,017
$49,721
$170,553
$50,111
$91,283
20.7%
$103,296
22.0%
$120,442
23.7%
$133,283
$42,000
$176,208
$47,145
$246,751
$48,220
Assets less liabilities .....................................................................................................
Ratio 1 ............................................................................................................................
High-cost projection:
Actuarial status (in millions):
Assets ............................................................................................................................
Liabilities ........................................................................................................................
$91,283
22.0%
$129,064
30.4%
$198,532
44.6%
$133,283
$42,000
$132,266
$52,027
$120,112
$52,186
Assets less liabilities .....................................................................................................
Ratio 1 ............................................................................................................................
$91,283
19.7%
$80,239
15.6%
$67,927
11.9%
1 Ratio
of assets less liabilities at the end of the year to the total incurred expenditures during the following year, expressed as a percent.
III. Collection of Information
Requirements
This document does not impose
information collection requirements—
that is, reporting, recordkeeping, or
third-party disclosure requirements.
Consequently, there is no need for
review by the Office of Management and
Budget under the authority of the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.).
IV. Regulatory Impact Analysis
A. Statement of Need
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with NOTICES
2021
This notice announces the Part B
monthly actuarial rates and premium
rates, as required by Section 1839(a) of
the Act, and the Part B annual
deductible, as required by Section
1833(b) of the Act, for beneficiaries
enrolled in Part B of the Medicare
Supplementary Medical Insurance (SMI)
program, effective January 1, 2022.
Section 1839(a)(1) of the Act requires
the Secretary to provide for publication
of these amounts in the Federal Register
during the September that precedes the
start of each CY. As section 1839 of the
Act prescribes a detailed methodology
for calculating these amounts, we do not
have the discretion to adopt an
alternative approach on these issues.
B. Overall Impact
We have examined the impact of this
notice as required by Executive Order
12866 on Regulatory Planning and
Review (September 30, 1993), Executive
Order 13563 on Improving Regulation
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and Regulatory Review (January 18,
2011), the Regulatory Flexibility Act
(RFA) (September 19, 1980, Pub. L. 96–
354), section 1102(b) of the Act, section
202 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform
Act of 1995 (March 22, 1995; Pub. L.
104–4), Executive Order 13132 on
Federalism (August 4, 1999), and the
Congressional Review Act (5 U.S.C.
804(2)).
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
direct agencies to assess all costs and
benefits of available regulatory
alternatives and, if regulation is
necessary, to select regulatory
approaches that maximize net benefits
(including potential economic,
environmental, public health and safety
effects, distributive impacts, and
equity). Section 3(f) of Executive Order
12866 defines a ‘‘significant regulatory
action’’ as an action that is likely to
result in a notice/rule: (1) Having an
annual effect on the economy of $100
million or more in any 1 year, or
adversely and materially affecting a
sector of the economy, productivity,
competition, jobs, the environment,
public health or safety, or state, local or
tribal governments or communities (also
referred to as ‘‘economically
significant’’); (2) creating a serious
inconsistency or otherwise interfering
with an action taken or planned by
another agency; (3) materially altering
the budgetary impacts of entitlement
grants, user fees, or loan programs or the
rights and obligations of recipients
thereof; or (4) raising novel legal or
policy issues arising out of legal
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mandates, the President’s priorities, or
the principles set forth in the Executive
order.
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
direct agencies to assess all costs and
benefits of available regulatory
alternatives and, if regulation is
necessary, to select regulatory
approaches that maximize net benefits
(including potential economic,
environmental, public health and safety
effects, distributive impacts, and
equity). A regulatory impact analysis
(RIA) must be prepared for major rules
or other regulatory documents with
economically significant effects ($100
million or more in any one year). Based
on our estimates, the Office of
Management and Budget’s (OMB’s)
Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs has determined this rulemaking
is ‘‘economically significant’’ as
measured by the $100 million threshold.
The 2022 standard Part B premium of
$170.10 is $21.60 higher than the 2021
premium of $148.50. We estimate that
the total premium increase, for the
approximately 60 million Part B
enrollees in 2022, will be $15.5 billion,
which is an annual effect on the
economy of $100 million or more. As a
result, this notice is economically
significant under section 3(f)(1) of
Executive Order 12866 and is a major
action as defined under the
Congressional Review Act (5 U.S.C.
804(2)).
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C. Detailed Economic Analysis
As discussed earlier, this notice
announces that the monthly actuarial
rates applicable for 2022 are $334.20 for
enrollees age 65 and over and $368.90
for disabled enrollees under age 65. It
also announces the 2022 monthly Part B
premium rates to be paid by
beneficiaries who file either individual
tax returns (and are single individuals,
heads of households, qualifying widows
or widowers with dependent children,
or married individuals filing separately
who lived apart from their spouses for
the entire taxable year) or joint tax
returns.
Beneficiaries who file individual tax returns with modified
adjusted gross income:
Beneficiaries who file joint tax returns with modified
adjusted gross income:
Less than or equal to $91,000 ..............................................
Greater than $91,000 and less than or equal to $114,000 ..
Greater than $114,000 and less than or equal to $142,000
Greater than $142,000 and less than or equal to $170,000
Greater than $170,000 and less than $500,000 ...................
Greater than or equal to $500,000 ........................................
Less than or equal to $182,000 ............................................
Greater than $182,000 and less than or equal to $228,000
Greater than $228,000 and less than or equal to $284,000
Greater than $284,000 and less than or equal to $340,000
Greater than $340,000 and less than $750,000 ..................
Greater than or equal to $750,000 .......................................
In addition, the monthly premium
rates to be paid by beneficiaries who are
married and lived with their spouses at
any time during the taxable year, but
who file separate tax returns from their
Income-related
monthly adjustment
amount
$0.00
68.00
170.10
272.20
374.20
408.20
Income-related
monthly adjustment
amount
Less than or equal to $91,000 ..................................................................................................................................................
Greater than $91,000 and less than $409,000 .........................................................................................................................
Greater than or equal to $409,000 ...........................................................................................................................................
TABLE 6—ACCOUNTING STATEMENT
[The estimated aggregate Part B premium
increase for all enrollees for 2022]
Estimated Aggregate Part B Premium Increase for
All Enrollees for 2022
Category
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with NOTICES
Annualized Monetized
Transfers.
From Whom to Whom? ..
$15.5 billion.
Beneficiaries to Federal
Government.
E. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
The RFA requires agencies to analyze
options for regulatory relief of small
businesses, if a rule or other regulatory
document has a significant impact on a
substantial number of small entities. For
purposes of the RFA, small entities
include small businesses, nonprofit
organizations, and small governmental
jurisdictions. Individuals and States are
not included in the definition of a small
entity. This notice announces the
monthly actuarial rates for aged (age 65
and over) and disabled (under 65)
beneficiaries enrolled in Part B of the
Medicare SMI program beginning
January 1, 2022. Also, this notice
announces the monthly premium for
aged and disabled beneficiaries as well
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:11 Nov 16, 2021
Jkt 256001
as the income-related monthly
adjustment amounts to be paid by
beneficiaries with modified adjusted
gross income above certain threshold
amounts. As a result, we are not
preparing an analysis for the RFA
because the Secretary has determined
that this notice will not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
In addition, section 1102(b) of the Act
requires us to prepare a regulatory
impact analysis if a rule or other
regulatory document may have a
significant impact on the operations of
a substantial number of small rural
hospitals. This analysis must conform to
the provisions of section 604 of the
RFA. For purposes of section 1102(b) of
the Act, we define a small rural hospital
as a hospital that is located outside of
a Metropolitan Statistical Area and has
fewer than 100 beds. As we discussed
previously, we are not preparing an
analysis for section 1102(b) of the Act
because the Secretary has determined
that this notice will not have a
significant effect on a substantial
number of small rural hospitals.
Section 202 of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA)
also requires that agencies assess
anticipated costs and benefits before
issuing any rule whose mandates
require spending in any one year of
$100 million in 1995 dollars, updated
annually for inflation. In 2021, that
threshold is approximately $158
million. Part B enrollees who are also
enrolled in Medicaid have their
PO 00000
Frm 00037
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Total monthly
premium amount
$170.10
238.10
340.20
442.30
544.30
578.30
spouses, are also announced and listed
in the following chart:
Beneficiaries who are married and lived with their spouses at any time during the year, but who file separate tax returns
from their spouses, with modified adjusted gross income:
D. Accounting Statement and Table
As required by OMB Circular A–4
(available at www.whitehouse.gov/sites/
whitehouse.gov/files/omb/circulars/A4/
a-4.pdf), in Table 6 we have prepared an
accounting statement showing the
estimated aggregate Part B premium
increase for all enrollees in 2022.
64213
$0.00
374.20
408.20
Total monthly
premium amount
$170.10
544.30
578.30
monthly Part B premiums paid by
Medicaid. The cost to each State
Medicaid program from the 2022
premium increase is estimated to be
more than the threshold. This notice
does impose mandates that will have a
consequential effect of the threshold
amount or more on State, local, or tribal
governments or on the private sector.
Executive Order 13132 establishes
certain requirements that an agency
must meet when it publishes a proposed
rule or other regulatory document (and
subsequent final rule or other regulatory
document) that imposes substantial
direct compliance costs on State and
local governments, preempts State law,
or otherwise has federalism
implications. We have determined that
this notice does not significantly affect
the rights, roles, and responsibilities of
States. Accordingly, the requirements of
Executive Order 13132 do not apply to
this notice.
In accordance with the provisions of
Executive Order 12866, this notice was
reviewed by the Office of Management
and Budget.
V. Waiver of Proposed Rulemaking
We ordinarily publish a notice of
proposed rulemaking in the Federal
Register and invite public comment
prior to a rule taking effect in
accordance with section 1871 of the Act
and section 553(b) of the Administrative
Procedure Act (APA). Section 1871(a)(2)
of the Act provides that no rule,
requirement, or other statement of
policy (other than a national coverage
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17NON1
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with NOTICES
64214
Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 219 / Wednesday, November 17, 2021 / Notices
determination) that establishes or
changes a substantive legal standard
governing the scope of benefits, the
payment for services, or the eligibility of
individuals, entities, or organizations to
furnish or receive services or benefits
under Medicare shall take effect unless
it is promulgated through notice and
comment rulemaking. Unless there is a
statutory exception, section 1871(b)(1)
of the Act generally requires the
Secretary of the Department of Health
and Human Services (the Secretary) to
provide for notice of a proposed rule in
the Federal Register and provide a
period of not less than 60 days for
public comment before establishing or
changing a substantive legal standard
regarding the matters enumerated by the
statute. Similarly, under 5 U.S.C. 553(b)
of the APA, the agency is required to
publish a notice of proposed rulemaking
in the Federal Register before a
substantive rule takes effect. Section
553(d) of the APA and section
1871(e)(1)(B)(i) of the Act usually
require a 30-day delay in effective date
after issuance or publication of a rule,
subject to exceptions. Sections 553(b)(B)
and 553(d)(3) of the APA provide for
exceptions from the advance notice and
comment requirement and the delay in
effective date requirements. Sections
1871(b)(2)(C) and 1871(e)(1)(B)(ii) of the
Act also provide exceptions from the
notice and 60-day comment period and
the 30-day delay in effective date.
Section 553(b)(B) of the APA and
section 1871(b)(2)(C) of the Act
expressly authorize an agency to
dispense with notice and comment
rulemaking for good cause if the agency
makes a finding that notice and
comment procedures are impracticable,
unnecessary, or contrary to the public
interest.
The annual updated amounts for the
Part B monthly actuarial rates for aged
and disabled beneficiaries, the Part B
premium, and the Part B deductible set
forth in this notice do not establish or
change a substantive legal standard
regarding the matters enumerated by the
statute or constitute a substantive rule
that would be subject to the notice
requirements in section 553(b) of the
APA. However, to the extent that an
opportunity for public notice and
comment could be construed as
required for this notice, we find good
cause to waive this requirement.
Section 1839 of the Act requires the
Secretary to determine the monthly
actuarial rates for aged and disabled
beneficiaries, as well as the monthly
Part B premium (including the incomerelated monthly adjustment amounts to
be paid by beneficiaries with modified
adjusted gross income above certain
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:11 Nov 16, 2021
Jkt 256001
threshold amounts), for each calendar
year in accordance with the statutory
formulae, in September preceding the
year to which they will apply. Further,
the statute requires that the agency
promulgate the Part B premium amount,
in September preceding the year to
which it will apply, and include a
public statement setting forth the
actuarial assumptions and bases
employed by the Secretary in arriving at
the amount of an adequate actuarial rate
for enrollees age 65 and older. We
include the Part B annual deductible,
which is established in accordance with
a specific formula described in section
1833(b) of the Act, because the
determination of the amount is directly
linked to the rate of increase in actuarial
rate under section 1839(a)(1) of the Act.
We have calculated the monthly
actuarial rates for aged and disabled
beneficiaries, the Part B deductible, and
the monthly Part B premium as directed
by the statute; since the statute
establishes both when the monthly
actuarial rates for aged and disabled
beneficiaries and the monthly Part B
premium must be published and the
information that the Secretary must
factor into those amounts, we do not
have any discretion in that regard. We
find notice and comment procedures to
be unnecessary for this notice and we
find good cause to waive such
procedures under section 553(b)(B) of
the APA and section 1871(b)(2)(C) of the
Act, if such procedures may be
construed to be required at all. Through
this notice, we are simply notifying the
public of the updates to the monthly
actuarial rates for aged and disabled
beneficiaries and the Part B deductible,
as well as the monthly Part B premium
amounts and the income-related
monthly adjustment amounts to be paid
by certain beneficiaries, in accordance
with the statute, for CY 2022. As such,
we also note that even if notice and
comment procedures were required for
this notice, we would find good cause,
for the previously stated reason, to
waive the delay in effective date of the
notice, as additional delay would be
contrary to the public interest under
section 1871(e)(1)(B)(ii) of the Act.
Publication of this notice is consistent
with section 1839 of the Act, and we
believe that any potential delay in the
effective date of the notice, if such delay
were required at all, could cause
unnecessary confusion for both the
agency and Medicare beneficiaries.
Chiquita Brooks-LaSure,
Administrator of the Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services,
approved this document on November
10, 2021.
PO 00000
Frm 00038
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Dated: November 12, 2021.
Xavier Becerra,
Secretary, Department of Health and Human
Services.
[FR Doc. 2021–25050 Filed 11–12–21; 5:00 pm]
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services
[CMS–8078–N]
RIN 0938–AU47
Medicare Program; CY 2022 Part A
Premiums for the Uninsured Aged and
for Certain Disabled Individuals Who
Have Exhausted Other Entitlement
Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services (CMS), Department
of Health and Human Services (HHS).
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
This notice announces
Medicare’s Hospital Insurance Program
(Medicare Part A) premium for
uninsured enrollees in calendar year
2022. This premium is paid by enrollees
age 65 and over who are not otherwise
eligible for benefits under Medicare Part
A (hereafter known as the ‘‘uninsured
aged’’) and by certain individuals with
disabilities who have exhausted other
entitlement. The monthly Medicare Part
A premium for the 12 months beginning
January 1, 2022 for these individuals
will be $499. The premium for certain
other individuals as described in this
notice will be $274.
DATES: The premium announced in this
notice is effective on January 1, 2022.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Yaminee Thaker, (410) 786–7921.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
I. Background
Section 1818 of the Social Security
Act (the Act) provides for voluntary
enrollment in the Medicare Hospital
Insurance Program (Medicare Part A),
subject to payment of a monthly
premium, of certain persons aged 65
and older who are uninsured under the
Old-Age, Survivors, and Disability
Insurance (OASDI) program or the
Railroad Retirement Act and do not
otherwise meet the requirements for
entitlement to Medicare Part A. These
‘‘uninsured aged’’ individuals are
uninsured under the OASDI program or
the Railroad Retirement Act, because
they do not have 40 quarters of coverage
under Title II of the Act (or are/were not
married to someone who did). (Persons
insured under the OASDI program or
E:\FR\FM\17NON1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 86, Number 219 (Wednesday, November 17, 2021)]
[Notices]
[Pages 64205-64214]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2021-25050]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
[CMS-8079-N]
RIN 0938-AU48
Medicare Program; Medicare Part B Monthly Actuarial Rates,
Premium Rates, and Annual Deductible Beginning January 1, 2022
AGENCY: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), Department of
Health and Human Services (HHS).
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This notice announces the monthly actuarial rates for aged
(age 65 and over) and disabled (under age 65) beneficiaries enrolled in
Part B of the Medicare Supplementary Medical Insurance (SMI) program
beginning January 1, 2022. In addition, this notice announces the
monthly premium for aged and disabled beneficiaries, the deductible for
2022, and the income-related monthly adjustment amounts to be paid by
beneficiaries with modified adjusted gross income above certain
threshold amounts. The monthly actuarial rates for 2022 are $334.20 for
aged enrollees and $368.90 for disabled enrollees. The standard monthly
Part B premium rate for all enrollees for 2022 is $170.10, which is
equal to 50 percent of the monthly actuarial rate for aged enrollees
(or approximately 25 percent of the expected average total cost of Part
B coverage for aged enrollees) plus the $3.00 repayment amount required
under current law. (The 2021 standard premium rate was $148.50, which
included the $3.00 repayment amount.) The Part B deductible for 2022 is
$233.00 for all Part B beneficiaries. (The 2021 Part B deductible was
$203.00.) If a beneficiary has to pay an income-related monthly
adjustment, he or she will have to pay a total monthly premium of about
35, 50, 65, 80, or 85 percent of the total cost of Part B coverage plus
a repayment amount of $4.20, $6.00, $7.80, $9.60, or $10.20,
respectively.
DATES: The premium and related amounts announced in this notice are
effective on January 1, 2022.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: M. Kent Clemens, (410) 786-6391.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
Part B is the voluntary portion of the Medicare program that pays
all or part of the costs for physicians' services; outpatient hospital
services; certain home health services; services furnished by rural
health clinics, ambulatory surgical centers, and comprehensive
outpatient rehabilitation facilities; and certain other medical and
health services not covered by Medicare Part A, Hospital Insurance.
Medicare Part B is available to individuals who are entitled to
Medicare Part A, as well as to U.S. residents who have attained age 65
and are citizens and to aliens who were lawfully admitted for permanent
residence and have resided in the United States for 5 consecutive
years. Part B requires enrollment and payment of monthly premiums, as
described in 42 CFR part 407, subpart B, and part 408, respectively.
The premiums paid by (or on behalf of) all enrollees fund approximately
one-fourth of the total incurred costs, and transfers from the general
fund of the Treasury pay approximately three-fourths of these costs.
The Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services (the
Secretary) is required by section 1839 of the Social Security Act (the
Act) to announce the Part B monthly actuarial rates for aged and
disabled beneficiaries as well as the monthly Part B premium. The Part
B annual deductible is included because its determination is directly
linked to the aged actuarial rate.
The monthly actuarial rates for aged and disabled enrollees are
used to determine the correct amount of general revenue financing per
beneficiary each month. These amounts, according to actuarial
estimates, will equal, respectively, one-half of the expected average
monthly cost of Part B for each aged enrollee (age 65 or over) and one-
half of the expected average monthly cost of Part B for each disabled
enrollee (under age 65).
The Part B deductible to be paid by enrollees is also announced.
Prior to the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization
Act of 2003 (MMA) (Pub. L. 108-173), the Part
[[Page 64206]]
B deductible was set in statute. After setting the 2005 deductible
amount at $110, section 629 of the MMA (amending section 1833(b) of the
Act) required that the Part B deductible be indexed beginning in 2006.
The inflation factor to be used each year is the annual percentage
increase in the Part B actuarial rate for enrollees age 65 and over.
Specifically, the 2022 Part B deductible is calculated by multiplying
the 2021 deductible by the ratio of the 2022 aged actuarial rate to the
2021 aged actuarial rate. The amount determined under this formula is
then rounded to the nearest $1.
The monthly Part B premium rate to be paid by aged and disabled
enrollees is also announced. (Although the costs to the program per
disabled enrollee are different than for the aged, the statute provides
that the two groups pay the same premium amount.) Beginning with the
passage of section 203 of the Social Security Amendments of 1972 (Pub.
L. 92-603), the premium rate, which was determined on a fiscal-year
basis, was limited to the lesser of the actuarial rate for aged
enrollees, or the current monthly premium rate increased by the same
percentage as the most recent general increase in monthly Title II
Social Security benefits.
However, the passage of section 124 of the Tax Equity and Fiscal
Responsibility Act of 1982 (TEFRA) (Pub. L. 97-248) suspended this
premium determination process. Section 124 of TEFRA changed the premium
basis to 50 percent of the monthly actuarial rate for aged enrollees
(that is, 25 percent of program costs for aged enrollees). Section 606
of the Social Security Amendments of 1983 (Pub. L. 98-21), section 2302
of the Deficit Reduction Act of 1984 (DEFRA 84) (Pub. L. 98-369),
section 9313 of the Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of
1985 (COBRA 85) (Pub. L. 99-272), section 4080 of the Omnibus Budget
Reconciliation Act of 1987 (OBRA 87) (Pub. L. 100-203), and section
6301 of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1989 (OBRA 89) (Pub.
L. 101-239) extended the provision that the premium be based on 50
percent of the monthly actuarial rate for aged enrollees (that is, 25
percent of program costs for aged enrollees). This extension expired at
the end of 1990.
The premium rate for 1991 through 1995 was legislated by section
1839(e)(1)(B) of the Act, as added by section 4301 of the Omnibus
Budget Reconciliation Act of 1990 (OBRA 90) (Pub. L. 101-508). In
January 1996, the premium determination basis would have reverted to
the method established by the 1972 Social Security Act Amendments.
However, section 13571 of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993
(OBRA 93) (Pub. L. 103-66) changed the premium basis to 50 percent of
the monthly actuarial rate for aged enrollees (that is, 25 percent of
program costs for aged enrollees) for 1996 through 1998.
Section 4571 of the Balanced Budget Act of 1997 (BBA) (Pub. L. 105-
33) permanently extended the provision that the premium be based on 50
percent of the monthly actuarial rate for aged enrollees (that is, 25
percent of program costs for aged enrollees).
The BBA included a further provision affecting the calculation of
the Part B actuarial rates and premiums for 1998 through 2003. Section
4611 of the BBA modified the home health benefit payable under Part A
for individuals enrolled in Part B. Under this section, beginning in
1998, expenditures for home health services not considered ``post-
institutional'' are payable under Part B rather than Part A. However,
section 4611(e)(1) of the BBA required that there be a transition from
1998 through 2002 for the aggregate amount of the expenditures
transferred from Part A to Part B. Section 4611(e)(2) of the BBA also
provided a specific yearly proportion for the transferred funds. The
proportions were one-sixth for 1998, one-third for 1999, one-half for
2000, two-thirds for 2001, and five-sixths for 2002. For the purpose of
determining the correct amount of financing from general revenues of
the Federal Government, it was necessary to include only these
transitional amounts in the monthly actuarial rates for both aged and
disabled enrollees, rather than the total cost of the home health
services being transferred.
Section 4611(e)(3) of the BBA also specified, for the purpose of
determining the premium, that the monthly actuarial rate for enrollees
age 65 and over be computed as though the transition would occur for
1998 through 2003 and that one-seventh of the cost be transferred in
1998, two-sevenths in 1999, three-sevenths in 2000, four-sevenths in
2001, five-sevenths in 2002, and six-sevenths in 2003. Therefore, the
transition period for incorporating this home health transfer into the
premium was 7 years while the transition period for including these
services in the actuarial rate was 6 years.
Section 811 of the MMA, which amended section 1839 of the Act,
requires that, starting on January 1, 2007, the Part B premium a
beneficiary pays each month be based on his or her annual income.
Specifically, if a beneficiary's modified adjusted gross income is
greater than the legislated threshold amounts (for 2022, $91,000 for a
beneficiary filing an individual income tax return and $182,000 for a
beneficiary filing a joint tax return), the beneficiary is responsible
for a larger portion of the estimated total cost of Part B benefit
coverage. In addition to the standard 25-percent premium, these
beneficiaries now have to pay an income-related monthly adjustment
amount. The MMA made no change to the actuarial rate calculation, and
the standard premium, which will continue to be paid by beneficiaries
whose modified adjusted gross income is below the applicable
thresholds, still represents 25 percent of the estimated total cost to
the program of Part B coverage for an aged enrollee. However, depending
on income and tax filing status, a beneficiary can now be responsible
for 35, 50, 65, 80, or 85 percent of the estimated total cost of Part B
coverage, rather than 25 percent. Section 402 of the Medicare Access
and CHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015 (MACRA) (Pub. L. 114-10) modified
the income thresholds beginning in 2018, and section 53114 of the
Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018 (BBA of 2018) (Pub. L. 115-123) further
modified the income thresholds beginning in 2019. For years beginning
in 2019, the BBA of 2018 established a new income threshold. If a
beneficiary's modified adjusted gross income is greater than or equal
to $500,000 for a beneficiary filing an individual income tax return
and $750,000 for a beneficiary filing a joint tax return, the
beneficiary is responsible for 85 percent of the estimated total cost
of Part B coverage. The BBA of 2018 specified that these new income
threshold levels be inflation-adjusted beginning in 2028. The end
result of the higher premium is that the Part B premium subsidy is
reduced, and less general revenue financing is required, for
beneficiaries with higher income because they are paying a larger share
of the total cost with their premium. That is, the premium subsidy
continues to be approximately 75 percent for beneficiaries with income
below the applicable income thresholds, but it will be reduced for
beneficiaries with income above these thresholds. The MMA specified
that there be a 5-year transition period to reach full implementation
of this provision. However, section 5111 of the Deficit Reduction Act
of 2005 (DRA) (Pub. L. 109-171) modified the transition to a 3-year
period.
Section 4732(c) of the BBA added section 1933(c) of the Act, which
required the Secretary to allocate money from the Part B trust fund to
the State
[[Page 64207]]
Medicaid programs for the purpose of providing Medicare Part B premium
assistance from 1998 through 2002 for the low-income Medicaid
beneficiaries who qualify under section 1933 of the Act. This
allocation, while not a benefit expenditure, was an expenditure of the
trust fund and was included in calculating the Part B actuarial rates
through 2002. For 2003 through 2015, the expenditure was made from the
trust fund because the allocation was temporarily extended. However,
because the extension occurred after the financing was determined, the
allocation was not included in the calculation of the financing rates
for these years. Section 211 of MACRA permanently extended this
expenditure, which is included in the calculation of the Part B
actuarial rates for 2016 and subsequent years.
Another provision affecting the calculation of the Part B premium
is section 1839(f) of the Act, as amended by section 211 of the
Medicare Catastrophic Coverage Act of 1988 (MCCA 88) (Pub. L. 100-360).
(The Medicare Catastrophic Coverage Repeal Act of 1989 (Pub. L. 101-
234) did not repeal the revisions to section 1839(f) of the Act made by
MCCA 88.) Section 1839(f) of the Act, referred to as the ``hold-
harmless'' provision, provides that, if an individual is entitled to
benefits under section 202 or 223 of the Act (the Old-Age and Survivors
Insurance Benefit and the Disability Insurance Benefit, respectively)
and has the Part B premium deducted from these benefit payments, the
premium increase will be reduced, if necessary, to avoid causing a
decrease in the individual's net monthly payment. This decrease in
payment occurs if the increase in the individual's Social Security
benefit due to the cost-of-living adjustment under section 215(i) of
the Act is less than the increase in the premium. Specifically, the
reduction in the premium amount applies if the individual is entitled
to benefits under section 202 or 223 of the Act for November and
December of a particular year and the individual's Part B premiums for
December and the following January are deducted from the respective
month's section 202 or 223 benefits. The hold-harmless provision does
not apply to beneficiaries who are required to pay an income-related
monthly adjustment amount.
A check for benefits under section 202 or 223 of the Act is
received in the month following the month for which the benefits are
due. The Part B premium that is deducted from a particular check is the
Part B payment for the month in which the check is received. Therefore,
a benefit check for November is not received until December, but
December's Part B premium has been deducted from it.
Generally, if a beneficiary qualifies for hold-harmless protection,
the reduced premium for the individual for that January and for each of
the succeeding 11 months is the greater of either--
The monthly premium for January reduced as necessary to
make the December monthly benefits, after the deduction of the Part B
premium for January, at least equal to the preceding November's monthly
benefits, after the deduction of the Part B premium for December; or
The monthly premium for that individual for that December.
In determining the premium limitations under section 1839(f) of the
Act, the monthly benefits to which an individual is entitled under
section 202 or 223 of the Act do not include retroactive adjustments or
payments and deductions on account of work. Also, once the monthly
premium amount is established under section 1839(f) of the Act, it will
not be changed during the year even if there are retroactive
adjustments or payments and deductions on account of work that apply to
the individual's monthly benefits.
Individuals who have enrolled in Part B late or who have re-
enrolled after the termination of a coverage period are subject to an
increased premium under section 1839(b) of the Act. The increase is a
percentage of the premium and is based on the new premium rate before
any reductions under section 1839(f) of the Act are made.
Section 1839 of the Act, as amended by section 601(a) of the
Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015 (Pub. L. 114-74), specified that the 2016
actuarial rate for enrollees age 65 and older be determined as if the
hold-harmless provision did not apply. The premium revenue that was
lost by using the resulting lower premium (excluding the forgone
income-related premium revenue) was replaced by a transfer of general
revenue from the Treasury, which will be repaid over time to the
general fund.
Similarly, section 1839 of the Act, as amended by section 2401 of
the Continuing Appropriations Act, 2021 and Other Extensions Act (Pub.
L. 116-159), specified that the 2021 actuarial rate for enrollees age
65 and older be determined as the sum of the 2020 actuarial rate for
enrollees age 65 and older and one-fourth of the difference between the
2020 actuarial rate and the preliminary 2021 actuarial rate (as
determined by the Secretary) for such enrollees. The premium revenue
lost by using the resulting lower premium (excluding the forgone
income-related premium revenue) was replaced by a transfer of general
revenue from the Treasury, which will be repaid over time.
Starting in 2016, in order to repay the balance due (which includes
the transfer amounts and the forgone income-related premium revenue
from the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015 and the Continuing
Appropriations Act, 2021 and Other Extensions Act), the Part B premium
otherwise determined will be increased by $3.00. These repayment
amounts will be added to the Part B premium otherwise determined each
year and will be paid back to the general fund of the Treasury, and
they will continue until the balance due is paid back.
High-income enrollees pay the $3 repayment amount plus an
additional $1.20, $3.00, $4.80, $6.60, or $7.20 in repayment as part of
the income-related monthly adjustment amount (IRMAA) premium dollars,
which reduce (dollar for dollar) the amount of general revenue received
by Part B from the general fund of the Treasury. Because of this
general revenue offset, the repayment IRMAA premium dollars are not
included in the direct repayments made to the general fund of the
Treasury from Part B in order to avoid a double repayment. (Only the
$3.00 monthly repayment amounts are included in the direct repayments).
These repayment amounts will continue until the balance due is
zero. (In the final year of the repayment, the additional amounts may
be modified to avoid an overpayment.) The repayment amounts (excluding
those for high-income enrollees) are subject to the hold-harmless
provision. The original balance due was $9,066,409,000, consisting of
$1,625,761,000 in forgone income-related premium revenue plus a
transfer amount of $7,440,648,000 from the provisions of the Bipartisan
Budget Act of 2015. The increase in the balance due in 2021 was
$8,799,829,000, consisting of $946,046,000 in forgone income-related
premium income plus a transfer amount of $7,853,783,000 from the
provisions of the Continuing Appropriations Act, 2021 and Other
Extensions Act. An estimated $8,891,766,000 will have been collected
for repayment to the general fund by the end of 2021.
[[Page 64208]]
II. Provisions of the Notice
A. Notice of Medicare Part B Monthly Actuarial Rates, Monthly Premium
Rates, and Annual Deductible
The Medicare Part B monthly actuarial rates applicable for 2022 are
$334.20 for enrollees age 65 and over and $368.90 for disabled
enrollees under age 65. In section II.B. of this notice, we present the
actuarial assumptions and bases from which these rates are derived. The
Part B standard monthly premium rate for all enrollees for 2022 is
$170.10.
The following are the 2022 Part B monthly premium rates to be paid
by (or on behalf of) beneficiaries who file either individual tax
returns (and are single individuals, heads of households, qualifying
widows or widowers with dependent children, or married individuals
filing separately who lived apart from their spouses for the entire
taxable year) or joint tax returns.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Beneficiaries who file joint
Beneficiaries who file individual tax tax returns with modified Income-related Total monthly
returns with modified adjusted gross adjusted gross income: monthly adjustment premium amount
income: amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Less than or equal to $91,000............. Less than or equal to $0.00 $170.10
$182,000.
Greater than $91,000 and less than or Greater than $182,000 and 68.00 238.10
equal to $114,000. less than or equal to
$228,000.
Greater than $114,000 and less than or Greater than $228,000 and 170.10 340.20
equal to $142,000. less than or equal to
$284,000.
Greater than $142,000 and less than or Greater than $284,000 and 272.20 442.30
equal to $170,000. less than or equal to
$340,000.
Greater than $170,000 and less than Greater than $340,000 and 374.20 544.30
$500,000. less than $750,000.
Greater than or equal to $500,000......... Greater than or equal to 408.20 578.30
$750,000.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition, the monthly premium rates to be paid by (or on behalf
of) beneficiaries who are married and lived with their spouses at any
time during the taxable year, but who file separate tax returns from
their spouses, are as follows:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Beneficiaries who are married
and lived with their spouses at
any time during the year, but Income-related Total monthly
who file separate tax returns monthly adjustment premium amount
from their spouses, with amount
modified adjusted gross income:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Less than or equal to $91,000... $0.00 $170.10
Greater than $91,000 and less 374.20 544.30
than $409,000..................
Greater than or equal to 408.20 578.30
$409,000.......................
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Part B annual deductible for 2022 is $233.00 for all
beneficiaries.
B. Statement of Actuarial Assumptions and Bases Employed in Determining
the Monthly Actuarial Rates and the Monthly Premium Rate for Part B
Beginning January 2022
The actuarial assumptions and bases used to determine the monthly
actuarial rates and the monthly premium rates for Part B are
established by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services' Office of
the Actuary. The estimates underlying these determinations are prepared
by actuaries meeting the qualification standards and following the
actuarial standards of practice established by the Actuarial Standards
Board.
1. Actuarial Status of the Part B Account in the Supplementary Medical
Insurance Trust Fund
Under section 1839 of the Act, the starting point for determining
the standard monthly premium is the amount that would be necessary to
finance Part B on an incurred basis. This is the amount of income that
would be sufficient to pay for services furnished during that year
(including associated administrative costs) even though payment for
some of these services will not be made until after the close of the
year. The portion of income required to cover benefits not paid until
after the close of the year is added to the trust fund and used when
needed.
Because the premium rates are established prospectively, they are
subject to projection error. Additionally, legislation enacted after
the financing was established, but effective for the period in which
the financing is set, may affect program costs. As a result, the income
to the program may not equal incurred costs. Trust fund assets must
therefore be maintained at a level that is adequate to cover an
appropriate degree of variation between actual and projected costs, and
the amount of incurred, but unpaid, expenses. Numerous factors
determine what level of assets is appropriate to cover variation
between actual and projected costs. For 2022, the five most important
of these factors are (1) the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on program
spending; (2) the impact on program spending of Aduhelm (aducanumab-
avwa), the drug newly approved by the Food and Drug Administration
(FDA) for treatment of Alzheimer's disease; (3) the difference from
prior years between the actual performance of the program and estimates
made at the time financing was established; (4) the likelihood and
potential magnitude of expenditure changes resulting from enactment of
legislation affecting Part B costs in a year subsequent to the
establishment of financing for that year; and (5) the expected
relationship between incurred and cash expenditures. The first two
factors, the impacts of the pandemic and of Aduhelm on program
spending, bring a higher-than-usual degree of uncertainty to projected
costs for the 2022 Part B financing. The other three factors are
analyzed on an ongoing basis, as the trends can vary over time.
Table 1 summarizes the estimated actuarial status of the trust fund
as of the end of the financing period for 2020 and 2021.
Table 1--Estimated Actuarial Status of the Part B Account in the Supplementary Medical Insurance Trust Fund as
of the End of the Financing Period
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Assets less
Financing period ending Assets (in Liabilities \1\ liabilities\1\ (in
millions) (in millions) millions)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
December 31, 2020................................... $133,283 $42,000 $91,283
[[Page 64209]]
December 31, 2021................................... 153,017 49,721 103,296
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ These amounts include only items incurred but not paid. They do not include the amounts that are to be paid
back to the general fund of the Treasury over time as specified by section 1839 of the Act as amended by
section 601(a) of the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015 and further amended by section 2401 of the Continuing
Appropriations Act, 2021 and Other Extensions Act, or the Accelerated and Advance Payments Program amounts
that are to be repaid by providers and returned to the general fund of the Treasury.
2. Monthly Actuarial Rate for Enrollees Age 65 and Older
The monthly actuarial rate for enrollees age 65 and older is one-
half of the sum of monthly amounts for (1) the projected cost of
benefits and (2) administrative expenses for each enrollee age 65 and
older, after adjustments to this sum to allow for interest earnings on
assets in the trust fund and an adequate contingency margin. The
contingency margin is an amount appropriate to provide for possible
variation between actual and projected costs and to amortize any
surplus assets or unfunded liabilities.
The monthly actuarial rate for enrollees age 65 and older for 2022
is determined by first establishing per enrollee costs by type of
service from program data through 2020 and then projecting these costs
for subsequent years. The projection factors used for financing periods
from January 1, 2019 through December 31, 2022 are shown in Table 2.
As indicated in Table 3, the projected per enrollee amount required
to pay for one-half of the total of benefits and administrative costs
for enrollees age 65 and over for 2022 is $317.68. Based on current
estimates, the assets at the end of 2021 are not sufficient to cover
the amount of incurred, but unpaid, expenses, to provide for
substantial variation between actual and projected costs, and to
accommodate the unusually high degree of uncertainty for program costs
due to the drug Aduhelm and the COVID-19 pandemic. Thus, a positive
contingency margin is needed to increase assets to a more appropriate
level. The monthly actuarial rate of $334.20 provides an adjustment of
$18.67 for a contingency margin and -$2.15 for interest earnings.
The contingency margin for 2022 is affected by several factors.
First, as noted previously, Aduhelm is a drug newly approved by the FDA
for the treatment of Alzheimer's disease. The annual cost per patient
for a course of treatment is reported to be $56,000 for the drug plus
the additional costs for the associated administration, diagnosis,
testing, and monitoring. The program cost of potential Medicare
coverage of Aduhelm would be paid from the Part B account of the
Supplemental Medical Insurance Trust Fund. Depending on utilization,
the potential costs for this course of treatment range from negligible
to very significant. To ensure that Part B is able to pay claims in
full and on time, the Part B financing must be sufficient to provide
for a realistic high-cost scenario of Aduhelm coverage. The contingency
margin has been increased to accommodate this risk.
Second, in order to take the uncertainty and potential impact of
the COVID-19 pandemic into account, assumptions were developed for
testing and treatment for COVID-19, utilization of non-COVID-related
care, potential costs for COVID-19 vaccines, and possible paths of the
pandemic. The Part B projected program costs were developed based on
these assumptions and were included in the margin development.
Third, starting in 2011, manufacturers and importers of brand-name
prescription drugs pay a fee that is allocated to the Part B account of
the SMI trust. For 2022, the total of these brand-name drug fees are
estimated to be $2.8 billion. The contingency margin for 2022 has been
reduced to account for this additional revenue.
The traditional goal for the Part B reserve has been that assets
minus liabilities at the end of a year should represent between 15 and
20 percent of the following year's total incurred expenditures. To
accomplish this goal, a 17-percent reserve ratio, which is a fully
adequate contingency reserve level, has been the normal target used to
calculate the Part B premium. The financing rates for 2022 are set
above the normal target due to the higher-than-usual uncertainty for
2022. The actuarial rate of $334.20 per month for aged beneficiaries,
as announced in this notice for 2022, reflects the combined effect of
the factors and legislation previously described and the projected
assumptions listed in Table 2.
3. Monthly Actuarial Rate for Disabled Enrollees
Disabled enrollees are those persons under age 65 who are enrolled
in Part B because of entitlement to Social Security disability benefits
for more than 24 months or because of entitlement to Medicare under the
end-stage renal disease (ESRD) program. Projected monthly costs for
disabled enrollees (other than those with ESRD) are prepared in a
manner parallel to the projection for the aged using appropriate
actuarial assumptions (see Table 2). Costs for the ESRD program are
projected differently because of the different nature of services
offered by the program.
As shown in Table 4, the projected per enrollee amount required to
pay for one-half of the total of benefits and administrative costs for
disabled enrollees for 2022 is $389.63. The monthly actuarial rate of
$368.90 also provides an adjustment of -$2.66 for interest earnings and
-$18.07 for a contingency margin, reflecting the same factors and
legislation described previously for the aged actuarial rate at
magnitudes applicable to the disabled rate determination. Potential
Medicare coverage of the drug Aduhelm is expected to have a negligible
impact on program costs for disabled enrollees as the vast majority of
the population with Alzheimer's disease is age 65 and older. Based on
current estimates, the assets associated with the disabled Medicare
beneficiaries at the end of 2021 are sufficient to cover the amount of
incurred, but unpaid, expenses and to provide for a significant degree
of variation between actual and projected costs.
The actuarial rate of $368.90 per month for disabled beneficiaries,
as announced in this notice for 2022, reflects the combined net effect
of the factors and legislation described previously for aged
beneficiaries and the projection assumptions listed in Table 2.
[[Page 64210]]
4. Sensitivity Testing
Several factors contribute to uncertainty about future trends in
medical care costs. It is appropriate to test the adequacy of the rates
using alternative cost growth rate assumptions, the results of which
are shown in Table 5. One set represents increases that are higher and,
therefore, more pessimistic than the current estimate, and the other
set represents increases that are lower and, therefore, more optimistic
than the current estimate. The values for the alternative assumptions
were determined from a statistical analysis of the historical variation
in the respective increase factors. The historical variation may not be
representative of the current level of uncertainty due to the COVID-19
pandemic and the Alzheimer's drug Aduhelm.
As indicated in Table 5, the monthly actuarial rates would result
in an excess of assets over liabilities of $120,442 million by the end
of December 2022 under the cost growth rate assumptions shown in Table
2 and under the assumption that the provisions of current law are fully
implemented. This result amounts to 23.7 percent of the estimated total
incurred expenditures for the following year.
Assumptions that are somewhat more pessimistic (and that therefore
test the adequacy of the assets to accommodate projection errors)
produce a surplus of $67,927 million by the end of December 2022 under
current law, which amounts to 11.9 percent of the estimated total
incurred expenditures for the following year. Under fairly optimistic
assumptions, the monthly actuarial rates would result in a surplus of
$198,532 million by the end of December 2022, or 44.6 percent of the
estimated total incurred expenditures for the following year.
The sensitivity analysis indicates that, in a typical year, the
premium and general revenue financing established for 2022, together
with existing Part B account assets, would be adequate to cover
estimated Part B costs for 2022 under current law, should actual costs
prove to be somewhat greater than expected. However, the current level
of uncertainty due to the pandemic and Aduhelm may differ from the
historical variation included in this analysis.
5. Premium Rates and Deductible
As determined in accordance with section 1839 of the Act, the
following are the 2022 Part B monthly premium rates to be paid by
beneficiaries who file either individual tax returns (and are single
individuals, heads of households, qualifying widows or widowers with
dependent children, or married individuals filing separately who lived
apart from their spouses for the entire taxable year) or joint tax
returns.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Beneficiaries who file joint
Beneficiaries who file individual tax tax returns with modified Income-related Total monthly
returns with modified adjusted gross adjusted gross income: monthly adjustment premium amount
income: amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Less than or equal to $91,000............. Less than or equal to $0.00 $170.10
$182,000.
Greater than $91,000 and less than or Greater than $182,000 and 68.00 238.10
equal to $114,000. less than or equal to
$228,000.
Greater than $114,000 and less than or Greater than $228,000 and 170.10 340.20
equal to $142,000. less than or equal to
$284,000.
Greater than $142,000 and less than or Greater than $284,000 and 272.20 442.30
equal to $170,000. less than or equal to
$340,000.
Greater than $170,000 and less than Greater than $340,000 and 374.20 544.30
$500,000. less than $750,000.
Greater than or equal to $500,000......... Greater than or equal to 408.20 578.30
$750,000.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition, the monthly premium rates to be paid by beneficiaries
who are married and lived with their spouses at any time during the
taxable year, but who file separate tax returns from their spouses, are
as follows:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Beneficiaries who are married
and lived with their spouses at
any time during the year, but Income-related Total monthly
who file separate tax returns monthly adjustment premium amount
from their spouses, with amount
modified adjusted gross income:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Less than or equal to $91,000... $0.00 $170.10
Greater than $91,000 and less 374.20 544.30
than $409,000..................
Greater than or equal to 408.20 578.30
$409,000.......................
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 2--Projection Factors \1\
[12-Month periods ending December 31 of 2019-2022 (in percent)]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Other
Physician Durable Carrier Physician- carrier Outpatient Home Hospital Other Managed
Calendar year (CY) fee medical lab \2\ administered services hospital health lab \4\ intermediary care
schedule equipment drugs \3\ agency services \5\
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Aged:
2019....................... 4.1 7.4 4.6 11.2 2.4 5.4 0.9 -3.5 5.7 8.1
2020....................... -11.3 2.7 8.1 4.2 -0.3 -7.8 -11.0 10.6 -5.0 8.6
2021....................... 20.9 2.5 8.4 14.9 6.2 23.6 17.2 5.1 6.7 5.5
2022....................... -0.3 2.4 -5.8 11.5 4.3 9.2 4.3 -6.1 5.5 3.7
Disabled:
2019....................... 3.2 3.1 8.2 9.2 3.4 4.3 1.9 -1.7 10.5 8.1
2020....................... -8.3 -0.4 -7.2 9.2 8.4 -9.2 -11.1 9.6 -2.3 9.7
2021....................... 16.8 1.1 8.1 16.9 2.4 18.5 23.3 6.6 12.8 5.6
2022....................... -0.1 2.6 -5.9 11.8 4.9 9.8 7.7 -6.1 8.2 3.8
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ All values for services other than managed care are per fee-for-service enrollee. Managed care values are per managed care enrollee.
\2\ Includes services paid under the lab fee schedule furnished in the physician's office or an independent lab.
\3\ Includes ambulatory surgical center facility costs, ambulance services, parenteral and enteral drug costs, supplies, etc.
\4\ Includes services paid under the lab fee schedule furnished in the outpatient department of a hospital.
\5\ Includes services furnished in dialysis facilities, rural health clinics, federally qualified health centers, rehabilitation and psychiatric
hospitals, etc.
[[Page 64211]]
Table 3--Derivation of Monthly Actuarial Rate for Enrollees Age 65 and Over for Financing Periods Ending
December 31, 2019 Through December 31, 2022
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CY 2019 CY 2020 CY 2021 CY 2022
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Covered services (at level recognized):
Physician fee schedule...................... $73.10 $62.11 $70.96 $68.60
Durable medical equipment................... 6.32 6.21 6.02 5.98
Carrier lab \1\............................. 4.35 4.51 4.62 4.22
Physician-administered drugs................ 17.37 17.34 20.68 24.56
Other carrier services \2\.................. 9.29 8.87 8.91 9.01
Outpatient hospital......................... 50.83 44.89 52.46 55.52
Home health agency.......................... 8.70 7.41 8.21 8.30
Hospital lab \3\............................ 2.04 2.16 2.15 1.95
Other intermediary services \4\............. 19.12 17.40 17.55 17.94
Managed care................................ 113.35 130.43 147.20 157.93
---------------------------------------------------------------
Total services.......................... 304.47 301.33 338.75 354.02
Cost sharing:
Deductible.................................. -6.32 -6.75 -6.93 -7.94
Coinsurance................................. -28.74 -25.73 -29.74 -26.06
Sequestration of benefits....................... -5.38 -1.79 0.00 -6.31
---------------------------------------------------------------
Total benefits.............................. 264.02 267.06 302.08 313.70
Administrative expenses......................... 4.11 4.40 4.33 3.98
Incurred expenditures........................... 268.14 271.46 306.41 317.68
Value of interest............................... -1.89 -1.33 -1.64 -2.15
Contingency margin for projection error and to -1.35 13.07 -13.77 18.67
amortize the surplus or deficit \5\............
---------------------------------------------------------------
Monthly actuarial rate...................... 264.90 283.20 291.00 334.20
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Includes services paid under the lab fee schedule furnished in the physician's office or an independent lab.
\2\ Includes ambulatory surgical center facility costs, ambulance services, parenteral and enteral drug costs,
supplies, etc.
\3\ Includes services paid under the lab fee schedule furnished in the outpatient department of a hospital.
\4\ Includes services furnished in dialysis facilities, rural health clinics, federally qualified health
centers, rehabilitation and psychiatric hospitals, etc.
\5\ The significant negative margin included in the 2021 actuarial rate is attributable to the application of
the provisions of the Continuing Appropriations Act, 2021 and Other Extensions Act.
Table 4--Derivation of Monthly Actuarial Rate for Disabled Enrollees for Financing Periods Ending December 31,
2019 Through December 31, 2022
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CY 2019 CY 2020 CY 2021 CY 2022
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Covered services (at level recognized):
Physician fee schedule...................... $72.64 $62.39 $67.69 $62.92
Durable medical equipment................... 12.00 11.06 10.29 9.78
Carrier lab \1\............................. 6.00 5.34 5.33 4.65
Physician-administered drugs................ 15.49 15.58 18.59 20.15
Other carrier services \2\.................. 12.37 12.42 11.81 11.52
Outpatient hospital......................... 65.12 54.88 60.42 61.44
Home health agency.......................... 6.83 5.61 6.35 6.32
Hospital lab \3\............................ 2.48 2.54 2.51 2.19
Other intermediary services \4\............. 53.01 49.88 48.04 49.64
Managed care................................ 124.51 151.94 179.62 202.67
---------------------------------------------------------------
Total services.......................... 370.42 371.64 410.66 431.27
Cost sharing:
Deductible.................................. -6.15 -6.56 -6.75 -7.73
Coinsurance................................. -41.62 -37.05 -39.25 -33.68
Sequestration of benefits....................... -6.45 -2.19 0.00 -7.74
---------------------------------------------------------------
Total benefits.......................... 316.21 325.84 364.65 382.12
Administrative expenses......................... 4.93 5.37 7.39 7.51
Incurred expenditures........................... 321.14 331.21 372.04 389.63
Value of interest............................... -2.52 -1.65 -2.04 -2.66
Contingency margin for projection error and to -3.21 14.04 -20.10 -18.07
amortize the surplus or deficit \5\............
---------------------------------------------------------------
Monthly actuarial rate...................... 315.40 343.60 349.90 368.90
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Includes services paid under the lab fee schedule furnished in the physician's office or an independent lab.
\2\ Includes ambulatory surgical center facility costs, ambulance services, parenteral and enteral drug costs,
supplies, etc.
\3\ Includes services paid under the lab fee schedule furnished in the outpatient department of a hospital.
\4\ Includes services furnished in dialysis facilities, rural health clinics, federally qualified health
centers, rehabilitation and psychiatric hospitals, etc.
[[Page 64212]]
\5\ The significant negative margin included in the 2021 actuarial rate is attributable to the application of
the provisions of the Continuing Appropriations Act, 2021 and Other Extensions Act.
Table 5--Actuarial Status of the Part B Account in the SMI Trust Fund Under Three Sets of Assumptions for
Financing Periods Through December 31, 2022
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
As of December 31, 2020 2021 2022
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Actuarial status (in millions):
Assets...................................................... $133,283 $153,017 $170,553
Liabilities................................................. $42,000 $49,721 $50,111
-----------------------------------------------
Assets less liabilities..................................... $91,283 $103,296 $120,442
Ratio \1\................................................... 20.7% 22.0% 23.7%
Low-cost projection:
Actuarial status (in millions):
Assets.................................................. $133,283 $176,208 $246,751
Liabilities............................................. $42,000 $47,145 $48,220
-----------------------------------------------
Assets less liabilities................................. $91,283 $129,064 $198,532
Ratio \1\............................................... 22.0% 30.4% 44.6%
High-cost projection:
Actuarial status (in millions):
Assets.................................................. $133,283 $132,266 $120,112
Liabilities............................................. $42,000 $52,027 $52,186
-----------------------------------------------
Assets less liabilities................................. $91,283 $80,239 $67,927
Ratio \1\............................................... 19.7% 15.6% 11.9%
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Ratio of assets less liabilities at the end of the year to the total incurred expenditures during the
following year, expressed as a percent.
III. Collection of Information Requirements
This document does not impose information collection requirements--
that is, reporting, recordkeeping, or third-party disclosure
requirements. Consequently, there is no need for review by the Office
of Management and Budget under the authority of the Paperwork Reduction
Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.).
IV. Regulatory Impact Analysis
A. Statement of Need
This notice announces the Part B monthly actuarial rates and
premium rates, as required by Section 1839(a) of the Act, and the Part
B annual deductible, as required by Section 1833(b) of the Act, for
beneficiaries enrolled in Part B of the Medicare Supplementary Medical
Insurance (SMI) program, effective January 1, 2022. Section 1839(a)(1)
of the Act requires the Secretary to provide for publication of these
amounts in the Federal Register during the September that precedes the
start of each CY. As section 1839 of the Act prescribes a detailed
methodology for calculating these amounts, we do not have the
discretion to adopt an alternative approach on these issues.
B. Overall Impact
We have examined the impact of this notice as required by Executive
Order 12866 on Regulatory Planning and Review (September 30, 1993),
Executive Order 13563 on Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review
(January 18, 2011), the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) (September 19,
1980, Pub. L. 96-354), section 1102(b) of the Act, section 202 of the
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (March 22, 1995; Pub. L. 104-4),
Executive Order 13132 on Federalism (August 4, 1999), and the
Congressional Review Act (5 U.S.C. 804(2)).
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563 direct agencies to assess all
costs and benefits of available regulatory alternatives and, if
regulation is necessary, to select regulatory approaches that maximize
net benefits (including potential economic, environmental, public
health and safety effects, distributive impacts, and equity). Section
3(f) of Executive Order 12866 defines a ``significant regulatory
action'' as an action that is likely to result in a notice/rule: (1)
Having an annual effect on the economy of $100 million or more in any 1
year, or adversely and materially affecting a sector of the economy,
productivity, competition, jobs, the environment, public health or
safety, or state, local or tribal governments or communities (also
referred to as ``economically significant''); (2) creating a serious
inconsistency or otherwise interfering with an action taken or planned
by another agency; (3) materially altering the budgetary impacts of
entitlement grants, user fees, or loan programs or the rights and
obligations of recipients thereof; or (4) raising novel legal or policy
issues arising out of legal mandates, the President's priorities, or
the principles set forth in the Executive order.
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563 direct agencies to assess all
costs and benefits of available regulatory alternatives and, if
regulation is necessary, to select regulatory approaches that maximize
net benefits (including potential economic, environmental, public
health and safety effects, distributive impacts, and equity). A
regulatory impact analysis (RIA) must be prepared for major rules or
other regulatory documents with economically significant effects ($100
million or more in any one year). Based on our estimates, the Office of
Management and Budget's (OMB's) Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs has determined this rulemaking is ``economically significant''
as measured by the $100 million threshold. The 2022 standard Part B
premium of $170.10 is $21.60 higher than the 2021 premium of $148.50.
We estimate that the total premium increase, for the approximately 60
million Part B enrollees in 2022, will be $15.5 billion, which is an
annual effect on the economy of $100 million or more. As a result, this
notice is economically significant under section 3(f)(1) of Executive
Order 12866 and is a major action as defined under the Congressional
Review Act (5 U.S.C. 804(2)).
[[Page 64213]]
C. Detailed Economic Analysis
As discussed earlier, this notice announces that the monthly
actuarial rates applicable for 2022 are $334.20 for enrollees age 65
and over and $368.90 for disabled enrollees under age 65. It also
announces the 2022 monthly Part B premium rates to be paid by
beneficiaries who file either individual tax returns (and are single
individuals, heads of households, qualifying widows or widowers with
dependent children, or married individuals filing separately who lived
apart from their spouses for the entire taxable year) or joint tax
returns.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Beneficiaries who file joint
Beneficiaries who file individual tax tax returns with modified Income-related Total monthly
returns with modified adjusted gross adjusted gross income: monthly adjustment premium amount
income: amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Less than or equal to $91,000............. Less than or equal to $0.00 $170.10
$182,000.
Greater than $91,000 and less than or Greater than $182,000 and 68.00 238.10
equal to $114,000. less than or equal to
$228,000.
Greater than $114,000 and less than or Greater than $228,000 and 170.10 340.20
equal to $142,000. less than or equal to
$284,000.
Greater than $142,000 and less than or Greater than $284,000 and 272.20 442.30
equal to $170,000. less than or equal to
$340,000.
Greater than $170,000 and less than Greater than $340,000 and 374.20 544.30
$500,000. less than $750,000.
Greater than or equal to $500,000......... Greater than or equal to 408.20 578.30
$750,000.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition, the monthly premium rates to be paid by beneficiaries
who are married and lived with their spouses at any time during the
taxable year, but who file separate tax returns from their spouses, are
also announced and listed in the following chart:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Beneficiaries who are married
and lived with their spouses at
any time during the year, but Income-related Total monthly
who file separate tax returns monthly adjustment premium amount
from their spouses, with amount
modified adjusted gross income:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Less than or equal to $91,000... $0.00 $170.10
Greater than $91,000 and less 374.20 544.30
than $409,000..................
Greater than or equal to 408.20 578.30
$409,000.......................
------------------------------------------------------------------------
D. Accounting Statement and Table
As required by OMB Circular A-4 (available at www.whitehouse.gov/sites/whitehouse.gov/files/omb/circulars/A4/a-4.pdf), in Table 6 we
have prepared an accounting statement showing the estimated aggregate
Part B premium increase for all enrollees in 2022.
Table 6--Accounting Statement
[The estimated aggregate Part B premium increase for all enrollees for
2022]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Estimated Aggregate Part B Premium Increase for All Enrollees for 2022
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Category
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annualized Monetized Transfers............ $15.5 billion.
From Whom to Whom?........................ Beneficiaries to Federal
Government.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
E. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
The RFA requires agencies to analyze options for regulatory relief
of small businesses, if a rule or other regulatory document has a
significant impact on a substantial number of small entities. For
purposes of the RFA, small entities include small businesses, nonprofit
organizations, and small governmental jurisdictions. Individuals and
States are not included in the definition of a small entity. This
notice announces the monthly actuarial rates for aged (age 65 and over)
and disabled (under 65) beneficiaries enrolled in Part B of the
Medicare SMI program beginning January 1, 2022. Also, this notice
announces the monthly premium for aged and disabled beneficiaries as
well as the income-related monthly adjustment amounts to be paid by
beneficiaries with modified adjusted gross income above certain
threshold amounts. As a result, we are not preparing an analysis for
the RFA because the Secretary has determined that this notice will not
have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities.
In addition, section 1102(b) of the Act requires us to prepare a
regulatory impact analysis if a rule or other regulatory document may
have a significant impact on the operations of a substantial number of
small rural hospitals. This analysis must conform to the provisions of
section 604 of the RFA. For purposes of section 1102(b) of the Act, we
define a small rural hospital as a hospital that is located outside of
a Metropolitan Statistical Area and has fewer than 100 beds. As we
discussed previously, we are not preparing an analysis for section
1102(b) of the Act because the Secretary has determined that this
notice will not have a significant effect on a substantial number of
small rural hospitals.
Section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA) also
requires that agencies assess anticipated costs and benefits before
issuing any rule whose mandates require spending in any one year of
$100 million in 1995 dollars, updated annually for inflation. In 2021,
that threshold is approximately $158 million. Part B enrollees who are
also enrolled in Medicaid have their monthly Part B premiums paid by
Medicaid. The cost to each State Medicaid program from the 2022 premium
increase is estimated to be more than the threshold. This notice does
impose mandates that will have a consequential effect of the threshold
amount or more on State, local, or tribal governments or on the private
sector.
Executive Order 13132 establishes certain requirements that an
agency must meet when it publishes a proposed rule or other regulatory
document (and subsequent final rule or other regulatory document) that
imposes substantial direct compliance costs on State and local
governments, preempts State law, or otherwise has federalism
implications. We have determined that this notice does not
significantly affect the rights, roles, and responsibilities of States.
Accordingly, the requirements of Executive Order 13132 do not apply to
this notice.
In accordance with the provisions of Executive Order 12866, this
notice was reviewed by the Office of Management and Budget.
V. Waiver of Proposed Rulemaking
We ordinarily publish a notice of proposed rulemaking in the
Federal Register and invite public comment prior to a rule taking
effect in accordance with section 1871 of the Act and section 553(b) of
the Administrative Procedure Act (APA). Section 1871(a)(2) of the Act
provides that no rule, requirement, or other statement of policy (other
than a national coverage
[[Page 64214]]
determination) that establishes or changes a substantive legal standard
governing the scope of benefits, the payment for services, or the
eligibility of individuals, entities, or organizations to furnish or
receive services or benefits under Medicare shall take effect unless it
is promulgated through notice and comment rulemaking. Unless there is a
statutory exception, section 1871(b)(1) of the Act generally requires
the Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services (the
Secretary) to provide for notice of a proposed rule in the Federal
Register and provide a period of not less than 60 days for public
comment before establishing or changing a substantive legal standard
regarding the matters enumerated by the statute. Similarly, under 5
U.S.C. 553(b) of the APA, the agency is required to publish a notice of
proposed rulemaking in the Federal Register before a substantive rule
takes effect. Section 553(d) of the APA and section 1871(e)(1)(B)(i) of
the Act usually require a 30-day delay in effective date after issuance
or publication of a rule, subject to exceptions. Sections 553(b)(B) and
553(d)(3) of the APA provide for exceptions from the advance notice and
comment requirement and the delay in effective date requirements.
Sections 1871(b)(2)(C) and 1871(e)(1)(B)(ii) of the Act also provide
exceptions from the notice and 60-day comment period and the 30-day
delay in effective date. Section 553(b)(B) of the APA and section
1871(b)(2)(C) of the Act expressly authorize an agency to dispense with
notice and comment rulemaking for good cause if the agency makes a
finding that notice and comment procedures are impracticable,
unnecessary, or contrary to the public interest.
The annual updated amounts for the Part B monthly actuarial rates
for aged and disabled beneficiaries, the Part B premium, and the Part B
deductible set forth in this notice do not establish or change a
substantive legal standard regarding the matters enumerated by the
statute or constitute a substantive rule that would be subject to the
notice requirements in section 553(b) of the APA. However, to the
extent that an opportunity for public notice and comment could be
construed as required for this notice, we find good cause to waive this
requirement.
Section 1839 of the Act requires the Secretary to determine the
monthly actuarial rates for aged and disabled beneficiaries, as well as
the monthly Part B premium (including the income-related monthly
adjustment amounts to be paid by beneficiaries with modified adjusted
gross income above certain threshold amounts), for each calendar year
in accordance with the statutory formulae, in September preceding the
year to which they will apply. Further, the statute requires that the
agency promulgate the Part B premium amount, in September preceding the
year to which it will apply, and include a public statement setting
forth the actuarial assumptions and bases employed by the Secretary in
arriving at the amount of an adequate actuarial rate for enrollees age
65 and older. We include the Part B annual deductible, which is
established in accordance with a specific formula described in section
1833(b) of the Act, because the determination of the amount is directly
linked to the rate of increase in actuarial rate under section
1839(a)(1) of the Act. We have calculated the monthly actuarial rates
for aged and disabled beneficiaries, the Part B deductible, and the
monthly Part B premium as directed by the statute; since the statute
establishes both when the monthly actuarial rates for aged and disabled
beneficiaries and the monthly Part B premium must be published and the
information that the Secretary must factor into those amounts, we do
not have any discretion in that regard. We find notice and comment
procedures to be unnecessary for this notice and we find good cause to
waive such procedures under section 553(b)(B) of the APA and section
1871(b)(2)(C) of the Act, if such procedures may be construed to be
required at all. Through this notice, we are simply notifying the
public of the updates to the monthly actuarial rates for aged and
disabled beneficiaries and the Part B deductible, as well as the
monthly Part B premium amounts and the income-related monthly
adjustment amounts to be paid by certain beneficiaries, in accordance
with the statute, for CY 2022. As such, we also note that even if
notice and comment procedures were required for this notice, we would
find good cause, for the previously stated reason, to waive the delay
in effective date of the notice, as additional delay would be contrary
to the public interest under section 1871(e)(1)(B)(ii) of the Act.
Publication of this notice is consistent with section 1839 of the Act,
and we believe that any potential delay in the effective date of the
notice, if such delay were required at all, could cause unnecessary
confusion for both the agency and Medicare beneficiaries.
Chiquita Brooks-LaSure, Administrator of the Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services, approved this document on November 10, 2021.
Dated: November 12, 2021.
Xavier Becerra,
Secretary, Department of Health and Human Services.
[FR Doc. 2021-25050 Filed 11-12-21; 5:00 pm]
BILLING CODE 4120-01-P