GOP lawmakers commit to big spending cuts, putting Medicaid under a spotlight – but trimming the low-income health insurance program would be hard
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What is Medicaid's role in the health care system?
Created in 1965 along with Medicare, the public health insurance program for older Americans, Medicaid pays for the health care needs of low-income adults and children, including more than 1 in 3 people with disabilities. It also covers more than 12 million who qualify for both Medicare and Medicaid because they are both poor and over 65.
In addition, this safety net program pays the health care costs of more than 2 in 5 U.S. births. Medicaid is a joint federal/state program, driven by federal funding and rules, with the states administering it.
The Affordable Care Act was supposed to make nearly all
So far, 40 states – as well as
Hundreds of studies have found that Medicaid expansion has improved access to care and the health of the people who gained coverage, while reducing mortality and bolstering state economies, among other positive outcomes.
Ten states haven't expanded Medicaid yet. Two of them,
Why are you concerned about Medicaid's funding?
A memo circulated among
To be clear,
Instead, they told the committee that oversees Medicaid and Medicare to identify cuts of that magnitude. Experts agree that slashing Medicare spending would be harder to pull off because Trump has made it clear he considers it off-limits, but at times he has suggested he might be open to trimming Medicaid. Trump says he supports the budget plan the House approved.
In an interesting coincidence, Medicaid itself costs around
How does the program work?
If you're eligible for Medicaid, by law you can enroll in the program at any time and get health insurance coverage.
If you require treatment for a condition Medicaid covers, whether it's breast cancer or the flu, that happens with no – or low – out-of-pocket costs. Being enrolled in Medicaid means your medical treatment is covered and cannot be denied for budgetary reasons. The federal government contributes a share of what states pay for the health care of residents who enroll, but it can't decide how much to spend on Medicaid – states do.
The federal match rate is linked to the per capita income of each state. That means a state with lower per capita income gets a higher federal match, with all states getting at least 50%. For states that participate in the Medicaid expansion, the federal match is 90% across the board for that population.
A dozen states have so-called trigger laws on their books that could automatically revoke Medicaid expansion if this enhanced match rate is lowered.
How can the federal government reduce its Medicaid spending?
The federal government could simply adjust the match rate, shifting more of the cost of Medicaid to states. But prior proposals have suggested a larger change, either through per capita caps or block grants.
Per capita caps would place a per-person cap on federal funding, while block grants would place a total limit on how much the federal government would contribute to a state's costs for Medicaid each year. In turn, the states would likely cover fewer people, reduce their benefits, pay less for care, or some combination of such cost-cutting measures.
Either per capita caps or block grants would require a massive transformation in how Medicaid operates.
The program has always provided open-ended funding to states, and both states and beneficiaries rely on the stability of federal funds to make the program work. Imposing caps or block grants would force states to contribute significantly more money to the program or cut enrollment drastically. Assuming a substantial cut in federal funding for Medicaid, millions could lose health insurance coverage they cannot afford to get elsewhere.
Speaker
What else could happen?
Another idea many
Some politicians argue that making people work to receive Medicaid benefits would help them transition to employer-based coverage, so adding that restriction may sound like common sense. However, the paperwork this requires can lead to lots of working people getting kicked out of the program and is very costly to implement. Also, job training programs, volunteering and education, unless in a degree program, generally don't come with health insurance coverage, making this reasoning faulty.
When
Is Medicaid vulnerable to waste or fraud?
Medicaid already spends less than Medicare or private health insurance per beneficiary. That includes spending on doctors, hospitals, medications and tests.
The Government Accountability Office – an independent, nonpartisan government agency – has estimated that preventing payments which shouldn't be made, or overpayments, could lead to
Would Medicaid spending cuts be popular?
That's very unlikely.
Polling and focus groups show that Medicaid is quite popular.
More than half of Americans say that the government spends too little on Medicaid, and only 15% say spending is too high.
We believe if Medicaid cuts were to be openly debated that members of
Should Medicaid be cut by anything close to
This article is republished from The Conversation under a
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