Tuesday, February 12, 2013

A new twist to Medicaid expansion fight

Here is a new angle to the Medicaid fight. The Wall Street Journal reports states refusing to expand their Medicaid programs may hurt employers:

"Employers in several states are bracing for higher health-care costs as some governors, worried about the impact on state budgets from the federal overhaul, resist a planned Medicaid expansion.

Under the new law, lower-paid workers at companies such as the Nashville, Tenn.-based chain of Captain D's seafood restaurants could qualify for the national expansion of Medicaid set to begin in 2014. Having those employees on Medicaid, the health program for low-income people that is funded with federal and state dollars, would mean the workers get health insurance while the company pays nothing.

But the Supreme Court ruling on the health law last summer let states opt out of the law's Medicaid expansion. Captain D's operates mostly in Southern states that have signaled they will opt out, arguing that it is unfair to expose their already-strapped budgets to the federal government's overhaul of health care.

That means the company will have to spend thousands of dollars to insure each full-time worker who can't enroll in the program, or pay fines starting at $2,000 a person.

"If the state doesn't expand the Medicaid coverage then by default that population becomes the responsibility of their employer," said Michael Folks, Captain D's general counsel and a senior vice president.

That has paved the way for tough choices for states. If states don't expand the Medicaid programs, the cost of covering millions of uninsured full-time workers will fall to employers. But state lawmakers also worry their budgets can't absorb the costs of participating over the long term....

Some governors' choices could be upended by state legislators, but employers have begun trying to come up with a backup plan for insuring millions of additional workers next year.

"The more people we [insure], the more our costs would certainly go up," said Alexis Barnett Gillette, director of marketing for the Mooyah burger-and-fries chain. It owns three restaurants in Texas, where Republican Gov. Rick Perry opposes the Medicaid expansion.

Some states have taken employers' complaints into account. The New Mexico Human Services Department said states would be imposing a "de facto tax increase" on businesses if they didn't expand Medicaid. Human Services Secretary Sidonie Squier made that point to the Republican governor, Susana Martinez, who opted to go ahead with the expansion last month.

But in South Carolina, Republican Gov. Nikki Haley ruled out the expansion. Her health and human services director, Tony Keck, said he was worried employers who already provide health benefits to low-wage workers could use any Medicaid expansion to drop insurance coverage and dump responsibility for their workers on the government.

The health law included provisions for all states to extend their Medicaid programs to people whose income is as much as one-third greater than the federal poverty level, which would be up to $14,856 for a single person. That would have added 16 million Americans to the insurance program for the poor, including millions of full-time workers who make minimum wage or slightly higher, as part of the law's goal of covering most of the country's uninsured.

The federal government will pay the full costs of covering the new Medicaid enrollees from 2014 through 2016 and at least 90% in each subsequent year. Lawmakers opposed to the expansion say states can't afford the additional administrative expenses, let alone their long-term share of coverage costs. They also fear the federal government could scale back the amount it pays in the future.

Many business associations opposed the health law, chiefly because it requires large companies to offer a generous level of low-price coverage to all full-time workers, or pay penalties, starting in 2014. These groups say they are worried about the government-budget impact of expanding Medicaid.

"Business owners may be exposed [to higher costs] if the expansion does not go through," said Amanda Austin, director of federal public policy for the National Federation of Independent Business, which brought the Supreme Court suit against the law. "On the other hand, business owners are generally concerned from a macro-entitlement perspective that these costs are going to be passed onto businesses indirectly."

Katie Mahoney, executive director of health policy for the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, pointed to recent rules published by the administration that determined the poorest people living in states that don't expand Medicaid won't have to pay personal penalties for going uninsured. "There's a very compelling argument" for the federal government to give employers the same exemption, she said.
..." Rest of the article

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Healthcare Americana is a complex game of cost-shifting. In the South the fried fish eaters will pay for the low wage workers' healthcare insurance. Elsewhere the low wage workers will have their healthcare paid by a combination of the eaters, the general polity, the under-paid workers, and the employers.

The healthcare industry, funeral directors, and top management in Mississippi will reap the benefits of not insuring the under-paid workers.

Anonymous said...

I didn't like Obamacare, but the gop's refusal to offer anything productive aside from "health savings accounts," ie shift costs form employers to workers, was beyond cynicism, which btw is why they're losing nationally. And the tea party is just the second coming of the know nothings.

Anonymous said...

"And the tea party is just the second coming of the know nothings."

Yea. Those Tea Party hicks can't seem to understand. Just because every prior government healthcare program has cost many times the amount projected and because each one has always failed to provide the quality of care promised and because each has always created a moral hazard (e.g., I'll just wait to go to the ER when I'm really sick because that's free), they think ObamaCare will be like all the other failed federal government healthcare initiatives. Why can't they realize that ObamaCare is different? President Obama said so.

Anonymous said...

The tea party harpy @2:27 makes its daily appearance.

Anonymous said...

Most of the savings from the President's program will be from unified billing, care plans, prevention, and reduced rates of disability and chronic diseases. The states will experience the same improvements from extended Medicaid coverage. Its true that the state match might change as states have healthier populations, but the state health outlays will not grow if we are becoming healthier.



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If you get tired come relax at the Fox News Tent. To gain admittance to the VIP section, bring either your Republican Party ID card or a Rebel Flag. Bringing both will entitle you to free drinks.Get your tickets now. Since this is an event for trolls, no ID is required, just bring the hate. Bring the family, Trollfest '07 is for EVERYONE!!!

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