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States Expect Medicaid Enrollment and Spending to Increase by Over 8
Percent Each in FY 2021, Primarily Driven By a Slumping Economy and Federal
Conditions to Maintain Eligibility to Access Enhanced Federal Medicaid Funds States Are
Taking Policy Actions to Respond to the Pandemic but Most Cite Budget
Concerns as Biggest Challenge Looking Ahead Following
several years of declining or flat enrollment growth, states expect Medicaid
enrollment and spending each to jump by more than 8 percent in fiscal year
2021, chiefly due to a slumping economy amid the pandemic and federal
conditions to maintain coverage to access enhanced federal matching funds,
according to a new KFF Medicaid budget survey. The 20th annual survey of state Medicaid
directors finds that enrollment is expected to grow by 8.2 percent and
combined federal and state Medicaid spending expected to increase by 8.4 percent
in the next fiscal year, reflecting a dramatic reversal in economic
conditions and state fiscal outlooks. This follows total Medicaid spending
growth of 6.3 percent for fiscal 2020, a year in which enrollment remained
basically flat. The
findings paint a picture of a Medicaid program that state officials expect
increasingly will be relied upon to provide health coverage and help soften
the economic blow of the coronavirus pandemic for low-income people – all at
a time when state governments’ financial capacity to provide such services is
stretched thin. To
help provide fiscal relief, Congress earlier this year authorized a 6.2
percentage point increase in the federal Medicaid match rate (FMAP) as part
of the Families First Coronavirus Response Act (FFCRA). To be eligible for
the funds, states cannot tighten Medicaid eligibility standards or raise
premiums beyond policies in place as of January 1, 2020 and must provide
continuous eligibility for enrollees through the public emergency period. The
FMAP increase does not apply to the Affordable Care Act’s expansion group,
for which the federal government already pays 90 percent of costs. Nearly
all states indicated that they are using the extra federal money to help pay
costs related to rising Medicaid enrollment and to help close Medicaid or
general budget shortfalls. About two-thirds of reporting states said the
fiscal relief is also being used to mitigate provider rate and/or benefit
cuts. While
expected state spending on Medicaid is crucial to state budgets, the
projections in this year’s survey do not provide a clear picture because
enhanced federal funding is now slated to expire at the end of March 2021
based on the recent renewal of the Public Health Emergency (PHE), later than
states had generally assumed. At the time of the survey, states estimated that
state Medicaid spending would decline in FY 2020 (-0.5%) and then sharply
increase in FY 2021 (12.2%) with most states assuming that the enhanced
matching funds would expire by December 2020. Nearly
all states report significant adverse economic and state budgetary impacts
driven by the pandemic, as well as uncertainty about the future. Even with
the extension of the enhanced FMAP, those funds are unlikely to fully offset
state revenue declines and fully address state revenue budget shortfalls that
range from 1 percent to up to 30 percent for FY 2021 according to the
National Conference of State Legislatures. State
policy actions The
annual budget survey, conducted with Health Management Associates, provides
an in-depth, state-specific examination of changes and initiatives taking place in Medicaid
programs. This year, many involve the response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Notable findings include:
Finally,
while there has been attention to institutional care, the survey report finds
that the long-term care workforce (for both institutional and community based
long-term care) was a challenge for many responding states, and on many
fronts related to the pandemic. The majority of states reported challenges
with reductions in long-term services and supports (LTSS) direct care
workforce supply as a result of the pandemic, access to personal protective
equipment (PPE) and testing for direct care workers, and infection among
direct care workers. As
states utilize their Medicaid programs to respond to the pandemic, the larger
trend toward state adoption and implementation of Medicaid expansion
continues. To date 38 states and Washington DC have adopted the ACA Medicaid
expansion. Of these, 36 states and DC have implemented expansion coverage
(including Idaho and Utah, which both implemented the expansion on January 1,
2020, and Nebraska, which implemented the expansion as of October 1, 2020).
Two additional states, Missouri and Oklahoma, will implement the expansion in
FY 2022 as a result of successful Medicaid expansion ballot initiatives. The
survey findings are presented in two reports:
Filling
the need for trusted information on national health issues, KFF (Kaiser Family Foundation)
is a nonprofit organization based in San Francisco, California. |
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Wednesday, October 14, 2020
States Expect Medicaid Enrollment and Spending to Increase by Over 8 Percent Each in FY 2021
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