Eakinomics: Medicaid
and the Goldilocks Test
Americans are a generous people, with an altruistic concern for the
financial and physical well-being of their fellow citizens. So, there is no
way they will support not having social safety net programs such as
Medicaid. Zero people being helped is too small. But
Chris Holt nailed it in his most recent Weekly
Checkup: “there is something wrong when safety net programs
designed to cover the poorest and most vulnerable grow to cover 80 million
people, or nearly 25 percent of the U.S. population.” One-quarter of the
people is simply too big.
How did this happen? First, the passage of the Affordable Care Act (ACA)
changed the focus to covering people – seemingly any people at
any cost – instead of a philosophy of providing access to coverage for
targeted populations in need. In some sense, the presumption became that
one should be covered, instead of the presumption that one had to
demonstrate need in order to get covered. Put differently, conservatives
retain the image of Medicaid as a limited program, while the progressive
wing considers it simply another lane on the “any route to universal
coverage” highway.
The pandemic exacerbated this trend toward universal
coverage because in “the Families
First Coronavirus Response Act—enacted in March 2020—Congress
authorized a 6.2 percent bump in the federal share of Medicaid costs, but
in exchange states had to suspend eligibility determinations for the
duration of the public health emergency.” In short, here’s the money, cover
people, and ask no questions. The result, as reported by The Washington Post, is
“Between February 2020 through this past January, enrollment climbed by 9.7
million to reach nearly 75 million nationwide, according to a
report released yesterday by [the Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid Services]. That’s an aggressive growth curve, which now means Medicaid
insures more Americans than any other health-care program or insurer.”
More than any other insurer cannot be the right size for a safety net
program. The good news is that at some point the public health emergency
will be over and states will be able to go back to checking their rolls to
ensure that only the eligible remain on Medicaid. This will be a big deal;
bigger than I had imagined. The Post notes,
“It’s not uncommon during eligibility determinations for states to lose up
to 25 percent of their enrollees, said Eliot Fishman, a Medicaid
expert at the advocacy group Families USA. ‘If this goes poorly you
could see at least 20 million or maybe more people lose coverage because of
administrative problems,’ Fishman told me.”
You read that right. Medicaid could go back to covering 60 million
Americans instead of 80. But is 60 million just right? You can count on the
Biden Administration’s answer being “no.” It will likely use every
administrative route at its disposal to keep individuals on Medicaid.
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