HCR 75 by
Speaker Chuck
Kleckley, introduced on the final day of the session for such instruments,
would establish a “hospital stabilization formula” by making an assessments on
hospitals, which then in essence would be paid back through increased
reimbursements. The need for these would come from an increased patient load
under Medicaid expansion, with the assessment supposed to pay for the state’s
portion under expansion, which begins at 5 percent in 2017 and then makes its
way to 10 percent by 2020. The formula would begin on or before Apr. 1, 2016 if
expansion is accepted by then, meaning for the first half of fiscal year 2017 there
would be no assessment. Rural, small, and specialty hospitals, all of whom
together don’t see much in the way of Medicaid business, would be exempt from
the assessment.
Of course, there’s no free lunch,
so somebody must pay for the assessment that matches the federal funds. And
that would be you emptying your pocketbook for that. The amount owed by the
state 2017 and after would end up from increased insurance premiums, increased
retail costs to out-of-pocket payers, and from Louisiana taxpayers who fund
insurance programs for state and local government employees and from the
portion they pay in federal taxes that’s the federal match, because to afford
their assessments hospitals simply will raise their costs of services and pass
them along to insurers and others. The state estimates that in the FY 2017-26
period this would cost
an extra $2 billion, even after removing out the alleged savings in reduced
uncompensated care costs.
If that additional money bought
better health care, maybe the whole thing could be worth it. But as the ongoing
studies known as the “Oregon Health Experiment”
continue to show, the best that can be said about expanding Medicaid’s impact
on the uninsured population is they will be no worse off. In other words, this
extra spending will accomplish nothing better, which begs the question of why
to spend it.
And the mechanism of this formula could
escalate costs far beyond the extra estimated $2 billion. Practically every state
that has expanded has found they underestimated state costs, often by hundreds
of millions of dollars a year in states even smaller in population than
Louisiana. In part, this is due to administrative costs of expansion where states
typically pick up nearly half of these. Plus, there’s nothing stopping
Congress from blending costs with the current, annually-adjusted rate (around
62 percent) for all other Medicaid payments that would increase the proportion
states pay above 10 percent, which would be a natural reaction to a program
proving much costlier than anticipated and with a federal government facing its
own fiscal pressures.
Thus, it’s a no-brainer that
Medicaid expansion is a bad deal for the citizenry. But not for hospitals, because
they are the direct beneficiaries of this wealth redistribution as money is
transferred from the people their way, so they are all excited about this
proposition. Which is why they supported and helped get passed the
constitutional amendment last year that sets this up, and continue to propagate
the argument that it’s this or continued reductions as planned in total uncompensated
care payments by the federal government – not realizing as expansion has
sputtered, Congress will have no choice but to reverse those cuts and will have
greater incentive to do so by states not accepting the bad deal of expansion.
The way the amendment worked, the
initial formula requires a two-thirds vote in each chamber to establish what
the resolution proposes. If accomplishing that, which means that expansion opponent
Gov. Bobby
Jindal will get no opportunity to veto, then next year in the first couple
of week of a regular session, or of any special session called prior to it, the
new legislature and the new governor, who could be more amenable to accepting short-term benefits despite the greater long-term costs, will have the chance to pass a law accepting
expansion, which would require only a simple majority.
Unfortunately, combined with the
fiscal difficulties the state faces, this creates perverse incentives for bad
decision-making. Seeking to grab any money available for future years, while
the last part of FY 2016 and first half FY 2017 would see all “free” federal
money and no assessment, encourages legislators to go for it. Legislators secretly
seeing expansion as a pot of money that for a few years more would bring more
to the state than take out who are running for reelection can vote for this and
claim no acceptance of expansion has occurred, survive the electorate on this
basis to return to office, and then not vote for expansion but as only a simple
majority would be needed enough of their colleagues could do it – especially new
ones who don’t want short-term budget headaches and figure they will have four
years to dull the impact of a vote for it to their constituents – and still have
the measure pass. And term-limited members with no immediate plans for state
office can vote for this and then disclaim responsibility for expansion as they
will not be there to vote on it.
So to keep up the quality of
medical outcomes among the poorer in the state and for less cost, optimally defeat
of HCR 75 will cut off at the pass any attempt at expansion next year.
Hopefully, at least a third of members in at least one chamber will understand the
wisdom of this rejection, and act accordingly. The citizenry can help by not
letting them off the hook on this resolution – letting them know they know the
stakes, and that defeating it serves the interest of the people.
2 comments:
Let's see:
We cant take care of our poor.
We cant take care of our sick and ill.
We cant take care of our institutions of higher education.
We cant take care of our roads and bridges.
We cant take care of our teachers and state employees
We cant take care of our public buildings and museums.
We are in great shape after seven years of Mr. Jindal and his enabling Legislature.
Oh, yes, we cant take care of the costs to run the new $1.2 billion hospital in New Orleans we just had to build.
I could go on and on and on,
It's good thing that the author is a political scientist, as it is obvious that he would flunk accounting & economics.
You see, without Medicaid, all the poor folks still go the hospitals and get free care - because of the REAGAN signed law stating that hospitals taking Medicare must care for patients without regard to their ability to pay. So the hospitals must jack up the prices of everything to make up for the loss - especially now that Medicaid funding for such folks has ended (i.e., replaced by the medicaid expanion), which of courss causes the prices to be much higher than they should.
This "back door" Medicaid expansion simply states that this extra amount will be 10% of the costs of Medicaid, instead of the de facto 100%. Oh, and with folks in a regular health plan, their medical needs will be much cheaper as problems can be detected by regular office visits, instead of the situation now in which such folks go to the hospital when they can't go any longer (with the condition much worsened).
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