Confusion in the Capitols
Apr 9th, 2010
Confusion in the Capitols
Stateline.org
It was just a quarterly meeting, with top state health officials from around the country gathered in
But this meeting was not routine. It came less than a week after President Obama signed into law the federal health care overhaul, a measure seen by supporters as his signature domestic policy initiative but by critics as an expensive, cumbersome and, at worst, unconstitutional piece of legislation. On this day, political rhetoric gave way to technocratic questioning on some of the most intricate details of the law. “There’s a lot about this bill that’s yet to be determined,” said Washington State Medicaid Director Doug Porter, who was at the meeting.
The session exemplifies the overwhelming sense of confusion among state lawmakers and health care officials around the country as they scramble to figure out what exactly health care reform means for their governments, their citizens and, not least of all, their budgets. With estimates ranging from state savings of $1 billion to $27 billion in additional costs, the one thing clear about health care reform is that little, if anything, is actually clear.
“It’ll probably be 10 years before it all shakes out,” says Chris Whatley, of the Council of State Governments, only half-jokingly. “This will push the fabric of the state-federal relationship in new directions, and we don’t know how it will all come out.”
A primary source of the confusion is the law’s interaction with 50 very different situations around the country. Many state officials have labeled the entire initiative an unfunded mandate that will stress state fiscal systems already weakened under the weight of falling tax revenue.
Winners and losers
The health care overhaul uses states as a vehicle for approaching universal health coverage, and what’s most important is the law’s Medicaid expansion. Requiring states to enhance Medicaid coverage will cost them $20 billion, according to the Congressional Budget Office, and cost the federal government hundreds of billions, in the next decade.
States will be required to set their Medicaid eligibility level at 133 percent of the federal poverty level — about $14,404 for one person and $29,327 for a family of four as of 2009 — for everyone, including childless adults and parents. For some states, this will represent a doubling of Medicaid rolls, as well as the incorporation of previously excluded groups into the program. States that have had Medicaid programs below the new threshold will see the entire expansion paid for by the federal government from 2014 to 2016, although that aid will taper off to a 10 percent share by 2020.
But not all states are equal under the new rules. Some, known as “expansion states,” already allow Medicaid participation above the 133 percent of poverty limit in the new law. For them, the initial level of federal funding will be much smaller. Therefore, it will make a huge difference whether a state is treated as an expansion state. It will mean the difference between the federal government spending billions to fund the beginning of Medicaid expansion and a more phased-in approach where a state will be required to provide more funding early on, although its share of the cost for a certain population will diminish over time. For the most part, it’s better to be a non-expansion state.
Brian Osberg,
But others, including state lawmakers and some policy experts, have said
Osberg says the state has asked the federal government for clarity, but until he hears otherwise will assume
An unfunded mandate?
One of the common charges against the health care overhaul, particularly from Republican governors, is that it is an unfunded mandate on the states. From insurance exchanges and administrative costs to the Medicaid expansion, it’s clear there will be an increase in government dollar s— both state and federal — going toward health care in the years to come.
But is it an unfunded mandate? Much of the criticism comes from states that are going to see the largest Medicaid expansion.
Because of that, the state is expected to see an additional 2 million people on its Medicaid rolls under health care reform, according to the Texas Health and Human Services Commission and Governor Rick Perry. The latest estimate of the cost to
But some contend that
Still, it’s true that the Medicaid expansion will cost
While there’s no shortage of cost estimates, Judy Solomon, a health policy expert at the Center for Budget and Policy Priorities, says it’s still early to be putting any sure price tags on individual states. “It’s not a question that’s easily answered,” she says. “When our state groups come to me and want an estimate, I really can’t give them one.” In Solomon’s view, there are simply too many variables to allow confident prediction.
But one state that’s already feeling the fiscal pinch of the health care overhaul is
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