Walker: Why Medicaid reform is needed
Battle lines are being drawn in
There is a need and an opportunity to rein in Medicaid and CHIP costs without compromising the safety net for those who are in need.
From Fiscal Year 2019 to Fiscal Year 2024, federal spending on these programs surged from
Taxpayers deserve greater accountability, and vulnerable Americans require a stable safety net. Reform does not mean abandonment. It means modernization, targeting, responsibility and accountability. There are several practical steps that
First, enact and enforce work requirements for able-bodied adults without dependent children. Medicaid and similar programs must serve as springboards to independence, not long-term crutches. Requiring work, job training, or community engagement restores accountability, fosters personal responsibility, and reinforces the dignity that comes with self-sufficiency.
Second, terminate the remaining COVID-era expansions of Medicaid and CHIP. The public health emergency has long since ended.
Third, restrict federal Medicaid funding to documented residents only. Emergency services for undocumented immigrants may remain, but such coverage should be the responsibility of states that choose to provide it — without federal reimbursement.
Fourth, crack down on state-level reimbursement schemes that exploit loopholes to game the federal match system. These practices siphon taxpayer dollars and distort the original purpose.
Fifth, tighten federal oversight by enhancing audits, upgrading internal controls, and ramping up enforcement. Fraud, waste and abuse must be aggressively rooted out. While some level of error is inevitable in large systems, tolerance for it should never be.
Finally, lawmakers should consider capping federal costs and providing states more flexibility through block grants with minimal federal standards.
Of course, reforming Medicaid and CHIP is just one piece of a larger puzzle. The broader
We must move away from the fee-for-service model, which rewards volume over value. Instead, payments based on capitation and diagnosis payment approaches can promote better care at a lower cost. Prescription drug policy also requires reform, including expanded price negotiations, shared research and development responsibilities, and a ban on direct-to-consumer advertising.
In the long term, we must reconsider the federal role in healthcare. One option is a universal, publicly funded plan that covers preventive, wellness and catastrophic care. Americans could purchase supplemental coverage, while additional federal efforts would focus on veterans, low-income individuals and those with disabilities.
It is time to face the facts. Medicaid and CHIP have grown dramatically, are inefficient and vulnerable to abuse. Reform is not only responsible but also essential. Delaying action puts taxpayers and those in need at risk. Our public health and fiscal future depend on getting this right.



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