The Democrat got upset when a
Republican Governors Association ad pointed out he had sponsored this year a resolution
to enact the Medicaid expansion portion of the misnamed Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act. That measure went nowhere, but the Legislature did pass a resolution
allowing it and the governor to act in the first quarter of next year to assess
a fee on many hospitals to pay for the state’s share of expansion, which then
undoubtedly would be passed along to health insurance ratepayers and taxpayers.
Other major Republican gubernatorial
candidates have expressed qualified desires to expand Medicaid. Public Service
Commissioner Scott Angelle wants to
pursue a hybrid public/private strategy as in Arkansas – apparently oblivious
to the fact that this meant that state had to accept such restrictive rules
that the cost overruns from these now has
it trying to abandon the effort. Lt. Gov. Jay Dardenne seems to want to accept the
arrangement as is except with a provision that the federal government not raise
the proportion the states are to pay into it, known as “cost blending” – except
that the fiscal
evidence shows cost blending is approaching inevitability. Sen. David Vitter seems most dubious about
expansion, averring that he would look at it as long as it undergoes
programmatic changes that likely radically would overhaul Medicaid as a whole.
But only Edwards wants to accept
expansion in unadulterated form. In defense of that criticized by the ad, he
responded by saying the state would save money in its first year of expansion and
that it would prevent from sending out of state “$1.6 billion” annually in federal
taxes.
Remarkably, his statement not only
contains a serious omission of fact, but also a bald-faced lie. Because the law
has the federal government paying the entire load for the first few years,
financially that would produce a net benefit for Louisiana were expansion to
take place this fiscal year. But the problem is after next year states must
start paying a portion, rising to the alleged 10 percent ceiling by 2020 (even
as the fiscal imperative towards cost blending almost guarantees at some point
that will increase at some point).
And that will cost Louisiana
taxpayers tremendously within the next decade. Had expansion occurred at the
beginning of eligibility to do so, over the fiscal year 2014-23 period the
forecast made at the beginning of the period showed the extra cost to the state
being $2.08
billion. After that period, using the most
optimistic scenario the annual extra cost initially was predicted to be $346
billion in FY 2023, growing at 8.8 percent a year. In other words, in the
2020s the state would spend an extra $4 billion, in FY 2029 coughing up $574
million additional than without expansion – almost the
entire general fund allocation for higher education this budgetary year.
Worse, Edwards tries to perpetuate
the myth
that passing expansion in any way would divert federal tax dollars paid at
present by Louisianans to fund the program back to the state. He fundamentally
misunderstands how Medicaid operates, as a matching grant program where dollars
spent by a state are reimbursed in part by the federal government. There is no
pot of money that states draw upon if they accept expansion that gets taken by
other states that do if they don’t.
Whatever tax dollars flow out of
Louisiana because of expansion is because other states chose to expand,
inflating federal costs that if all states had expanded would have been an extra
$638 billion from 2013-2023. It has nothing to do with Louisiana wanting to
make the same poor decision and would happen regardless of whether Louisiana
expanded. In fact, doing so would increase the potential tax burden on
Louisianans (and all American taxpayers) in order to pay for the billions of
extra dollars spent by the federal government in Louisiana.
At best, Edwards presents a very
distorted picture of the fiscal impact of expansion; at worst, he conjures a
mendaciously fictitious one. Neither speaks well of his factual knowledge nor
ability to use facts to reason validly – qualities probably most voters prefer
in their elected officials.
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