This entrant comes courtesy of the Legislative Fiscal Office, which
prepares fiscal notes for bills. Several have been filed to force the state to
accept expanding eligibility from 25 percent to 138 percent of the Federal
Poverty Line; those below already can get it, and those higher will be forced
to get insurance or pay a fine, while some will receive subsidies to do so.
Jindal opposes accepting this optional provision of the Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act (“Obamacare”), with a good
set of reasons explaining why.
The note
computes two scenarios, with the more likely claiming state savings of about
$533 million over the first five years of the program, and around $185 million
over the first ten years – the standard windows of analysis in a fiscal note.
No doubt these figures, or the ones under the less likely scenario (which
predict over $500 million savings over the decade), will be echoed by
supporters of expansion – who also will neglect to mention the conceptual flaws
of the analysis and one crucial point.
What really devalues the note – a mistake avoided by the most conceptually
sound of these (even if it has minor flaws) from the Department of Health
and Hospitals – is that it assumes Medicaid rates paid by the state will not go
up in order to achieve program objectives. Every indication is that providers
willing to take Medicaid patients will not expand nearly enough to accommodate
supply; indeed, supply may even contract. In turn, this will force people
to emergency rooms, raising that cost of care where the federal government
reimbursement is less favorable. This error alone probably wipes out the
presumed 10-year savings.
Other problems exist as well. In using data mined under different
assumptions from those part of the Obamacare environment, it likely
underestimates the “crowd-out” effect because of the larger number of employers
who will opt out of insuring workers, either by paying the penalty or by
structuring operations so they don’t have to pay it or provide insurance,
dumping clients not accounted for in the analysis into the system and
increasing its expense. It also unrealistically assumes that all new entrants
will go into the Bayou Health managed capitation or cost share plans; some because
of certain medical conditions instead will be put into the less efficient
fee-for-service “legacy” Medicaid, which is estimated will continue to carry a
quarter of all Medicaid clients.
In addition, it assumes that the federal government neither will
increase the mandated minimum of services to be covered nor will lower the
match rate that begins at 100 percent but slides down to 90 percent by 2020.
Given that regular rates even for this highest state in below 70 percent
(Louisiana’s for this year is about 63 percent), it appears almost certain that
in the future the federal government will try to blend rates at the very least.
And once a state accepts, contrary to disinformation spread by supporters, you’re
trapped
in it forever.
But the most salient sentence in the note, and consistent with nearly
every other report issued on the subject – and the one sure to be ignored and
avoided by supporters – is this one: “Both
models reflect a net SGF cost beginning in year 7 (2020) [when federal match
rate levels at 90 percent], and in future years.” (bracketed words added)
Unlike the DHH report, which had an estimate that by 2023 the cost would be $93
million and increasing then by 15 percent year, the note gives no specific
number.
Yet the message is quite clear: over the long run, expansion costs taxpayers
more than without it, and probably accelerating every year. That was entirely
by design of Democrats who shoved the law down America’s throat, to try to fool
the people into thinking expansion of government control of health care would
reduce costs, by backloading costs. At the time, they did not realize that would
come into play on the expansion issue because it didn’t exist; only when the
U.S. Supreme Court erroneously upheld the mandate portion of the law by calling
failure to do something (buy health insurance) subject to a “tax” did then the
logic extend to void the mandatory nature of the expansion for states in what
is supposed to be a voluntary grant program.
In short, no argument can be sustained for acceptance on the basis of
cost. Maybe other arguments for persuasion could be attempted, but “cost
savings” simply is not one of them. And keep in mind this applied just to taxpayers
to Louisiana; Louisianans paying federal income taxes will pay more of those,
period, as will all U.S taxpayers to finance a program the estimated costs of
which continue to spiral out of control and are bumping up premiums.
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