All economic policies have unintended consequences. The decentralization of healthcare finance and policy proposed by congressional Republicans is no exception.
The Better Care Reconciliation Act (BCRA) pending in
the Senate would sharply shift responsibility for healthcare toward the states. Some of the biggest changes
would come in Medicaid. would sharply cut federal spending, leaving states with the choice
of responding by increasing their own contributions to maintain current
enrollments, or by reducing coverage. Aside from Medicaid, they would gain the
right to redefine the essential services insurance must cover, to experiment
with high risk pools, and to change policies toward pre-existing conditions.
A group of GOP senators skeptical of the BCRA have offered a
different proposal that would permit even greater diversity in state healthcare
policy. The Patient
Freedom Act sponsored by Senators Susan Collins (R-ME), Bill Cassidy,
MD (R-LA), Shelley Moore Capito (R-WV) and Johnny Isakson (R-GA) would give
states three choices: Keep the existing framework of the ACA with most of its
federal subsidies, sign up for a new market-oriented system centered on direct
contributions to health savings accounts for each individual, or design a new
system of their own, with federal approval.
The decentralization is intended to bring an upsurge of
innovation, leading to a more flexible, more customer-centered system that
better meets the needs of the diverse populations of various regions of the
country. As AEI Visiting Scholar Joel
Zinberg puts it, the BCRA would “make it far more likely that Obamacare’s
section 1332 “innovation waivers” can become effective tools for state-based
experimentation and reforms to improve insurance coverage.” He notes that the BCRA
would lift restrictions that have inhibited waiver applications, streamline the
application process and create a $2 billion fund to motivate states to apply
for innovation waivers.
For the sake of argument, let’s take the promised upside at
face value. Even so, increased state-to-state diversity in healthcare policy and
increased state responsibility for funding have their downsides, too. They
would strain the resources of many states, undermine labor mobility, and weaken
key macroeconomic stabilization mechanisms. These unintended consequences, too,
need to be part of the healthcare debate.
Constraints on
states’ ability to respond to changes in federal policy
Republicans insist that the BCRA would not actually cut
Medicaid spending. Instead, they claim that states will step in to fill the gap
as the growth of federal spending slows. Pennsylvania Senator Pat Toomey,
speaking on CBS’ Face
the Nation, put it this way:
No one loses coverage. What we are
going to do, gradually over seven years is transition from the 90 percent
federal share that Obamacare created and transition that to where the federal
government is still paying a majority, but the states are kicking in their fair
share, an amount equivalent to what they pay for all the other categories of
eligibility.
The problem is that not all states would have the capacity
to respond constructively to the obligations and opportunities the BCRA would
hand them. A new study from the Kaiser
Family Foundation examines five groups of factors that affect states’ ability
to respond to federal Medicaid cuts and caps:
- Medicaid policy choices, including expansion, eligibility, and reimbursement rates
- Demographics, including poverty rates, age, and urban-rural mix
- Health status of the state population, including disabilities, mental health problems, and opioid death rates
- Budget and revenue issues, including personal income, tax policies, and current levels of per capita spending
- Healthcare cost factors, including levels of per capita healthcare spending, insurance premiums, health shortage areas, and Medicaid provider participation.
All states would face some problems in responding to the
proposed changes in federal policy, and nearly two-thirds of them have serious
exposures to more than one risk factor. Eleven states rank in the top five for
five or more risk factors (Alabama, Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky,
Louisiana, Mississippi, New Mexico, South Carolina, Texas, and West Virginia).
The study notes that states with multiple risk factors would face difficult
choices making program cuts or filling gaps in federal funding without reducing
the quality of care to some residents, and even greater problems in coping with
future needs, new therapies, or adverse demographic changes.
As Niskanen Center’s Sam Hammond
points out in a recent post, the evolution of Canada’s healthcare system
provides some parallels. Canada’s system, too, is a joint federal-provincial
program, with the federal government now covering 23 percent of costs. A 1997
reform changed an earlier subsidy formula to a block grant system much like
that now favored by Republicans in the U.S. Congress. Hammond’s conclusion is
that some of the hoped-for benefits of provincial control did emerge, but those
gains were tempered by a tendency of provinces to react to budget constraints
by cutting services and reducing provider reimbursements. The latter reaction
raises a particular red flag, since critics already complain that Medicaid
reimbursement rates are too low.
In short, although the BCRA does not require states to cut
Medicaid coverage, it seems likely that there will be cuts in many states. Even
a sympathetic observer like Zinberg concedes it is “doubtful that innovation
can offset decreased federal funds without cuts to Medicaid benefits and
enrollment.”
Impacts on labor
mobility
Labor mobility--the ability of people to change jobs to
match their skills with the changing needs of employers—is a key to the
efficiency of the labor market. Writing for Liberty
Street Economics, the blog of the New York Fed, Fatih Karahan and Darius Li
maintain that
[T}he willingness of the U.S.
workforce to move is a factor behind the greater dynamism of the U.S. labor
market compared to Europe. While Europeans tend to be more reluctant to move to
distant places within their respective countries, the idea of moving across
state borders for a job has been woven into the fabric of the American Dream.
However, as Karahan and Li note, interstate mobility in the
U.S. labor market has fallen substantially in recent decades. A part of the
reduction is due to aging of the work force, since older workers have always
moved less often, but their calculations suggest that only 20 percent of the
decrease in mobility can be traced to demographic factors. The gap between the red line, which shows how much
mobility would have dropped due to age-adjustment alone, and the blue line,
which shows the actual mobility trend, must be due to something else.
Karahan and Li, along with
other teams like one led by Raven Molloy
of the Federal Reserve Board, have considered many possible causes of declining
labor mobility, including indirect effects of demographic change, better employer-worker
relations, greater wage equality, changes in job training policies and decreasing
social trust. Despite their efforts, a large part of the decline in mobility
remains unexplained.
Institutional changes are
important, too. Although considerations like some of the decline in labor
mobility may have benign causes, such as better employer-worker relations, less
benign causes are at work, too. There is a consensus that institutional changes
that discourage interstate moves in search of better jobs reduce labor market
efficiency.
Elsewhere I have pointed to
the rise in occupational licensing and job-lock
caused by employer-sponsored health insurance as examples of this phenomenon.
Increased state-to-state diversity in Medicaid and other healthcare programs would
have similar effects. The greater the diversity, the greater the risk that a
move to a new state would lead to a reduction in coverage or an increase in its
cost. Even with adequate access to health care in the new state, a new resident
might encounter gaps in coverage, waiting periods, or burdensome administrative
requirements.
The problems of interstate moves already encountered under Medicaid
illustrate the issues. The American
Eldercare Research Organization characterizes transfers of Medicaid from
state to state as “difficult, but not impossible.” As the organization’s
website explains,
Much to the surprise and dismay of
many, Medicaid coverage and benefits cannot be simply switched from one state
to another. While Medicaid is often thought of as a federal program, each state
is given the flexibility to set their own eligibility requirements. Therefore,
each state evaluates its applicants independently from each other state. Those
wishing to transfer their coverage must re-apply for Medicaid in the new state.
Further complicating matters is the
fact that someone cannot be eligible for Medicaid in two states at the same
time. Therefore, in order to apply for Medicaid in a new state, the individual
must first close out their Medicaid.
You might think Medicaid would be irrelevant to anyone with
good enough job prospects to make it worth moving to a new state, but that is
not really true. Households with incomes well above the standard Medicaid cut-off
can be affected if they have a special-needs child receiving community-based
care under a Medicaid waiver. A similar situation faces workers with elderly
relatives who receive community-based care that allows them to live at home.
Policies regarding waivers and community-based care differ already
differ from state to state than standard Medicare. MedicareWaiver.org explains the situation
in as follows:
The waiting period to get onto a
waiver program, can be many years, and varies by state. Unfortunately, waiver
eligibility does not transfer from state to state. This is a huge problem for
families who wish to move to another state. It also unfairly distributes the
federally matched dollars among states because each state determines its own
budget.
Giving states even more flexibility in crafting their
healthcare policies would expose even more workers to similar barriers to
interstate job moves.
Macroeconomic
consequences of healthcare federalism
The macroeconomics of business cycles might seem a long way
from healthcare policy, but, as in the case of labor mobility, there is a
connection. The connection lies in the unintended effects of healthcare
decentralization on countercyclical fiscal policy.
Countercyclical policy means the use of tax cuts or spending
increases to stimulate the economy during a recession, and tax increases or
spending cuts to hold the lid on during a boom. Sometimes that means using
active stimulus measures, like the Bush administration’s tax cuts in the spring
of 2008 or Obama’s stimulus package in early 2009. However, the federal budget
contains powerful automatic stabilizers
that work to smooth business cycles even when no active measures are taken.
The most important automatic stabilizers are decreases in
personal and business taxes that occur when incomes fall during a recession,
and increases in spending on unemployment compensation and other social
benefits that occur when large numbers of people lose their jobs. Medicaid is
one of those automatic stabilizers. A 2009
study from the Kaiser Family Foundation estimated that an increase in the
unemployment rate from its 2007 level of 4.6 percent to 10 percent would add
more than 5 million people to the roles of Medicare and related children’s
health programs.
Moving responsibility for Medicaid and other health programs
from the federal to the state level, as Republican healthcare reforms propose
doing, would undermine Medicaid’s effectiveness as an automatic stabilizer. The
reason is that state finances are subject to balanced budget rules. Except to
the extent they are cushioned by rainy day funds, state expenditures on
noncapital items are constrained by tax receipts. During a recession, when tax
revenues fall, expenditures must be cut, too--fewer teachers in the schools,
fewer rangers in the parks, and fewer home health assistants for the elderly
and disabled. Such cuts are procyclical—they
add momentum to an economic downturn rather than moderating it.
The problem of procyclical state spending is made worse by
the fact that recessions always hit some states harder than others. For
example, the following chart shows that during the downturn of 2007 to 2009, job
losses in Nevada were more than twice the U.S. average, with Arizona and
Florida close behind. Meanwhile, Alaska and North Dakota actually gained jobs.
Does it really matter? Yes, as we can see by comparing the
United States with the European Union. Individual member states of the EU face
balanced budget constraints, as do the 50 states of the United States, but the
central budget of the EU accounts for only 2 percent of all government
spending, with member states and local governments responsible for the other 98
percent. In the United States, the ratio is about 70/30.
As a result, the problem of procyclical policy in member
states is even worse. During the global financial
crisis, the most affected states of the EU were forced to undertake harsh
austerity programs that pushed unemployment rates up and kept them high for
years. In the more fiscally centralized United States, the unemployment rate reached
its peak and began to decline much earlier. (For a detailed case study of how this worked out in Greece, see this slideshow.)
The decentralizations of healthcare policy embodied in the
BCRA would not, by themselves, turn Nevada into Greece, nor would they drag
U.S. macroeconomic performance down to the level of the EU. They would,
however, be a clear step in the wrong direction.
The bottom line
Federalism has its place. Not all public policy decisions should
be made in Washington. There are valid reasons to leave many areas of policy to
the 50 states. Peoples’ needs and preferences vary from one state to another,
and states can often act as laboratories to test innovations that later become
more widely established. Healthcare policy is no exception.
However, as we have argued here, decentralization of
healthcare policy and finance also has a down side. In states that are less
equipped to handle their newfound freedoms and responsibilities, we would
expect some people to experience a decrease in healthcare quality and access. Another
unintended consequence of decentralization would be a decrease in interstate
mobility and a loss of labor market efficiency. Still another would be a
weakening of the automatic fiscal stabilizers than help the economy weather
recessions and an increase in the already wide degree to which the economic
downturns affect individual states.
In short, the law of unintended consequences operates in health care,
too. Failing to acknowledge those consequences will not make them go away.
A version of this post previously appeared at NiskanenCenter.com
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