Showing posts with label ACA Medicaid expansion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ACA Medicaid expansion. Show all posts

Thursday, May 08, 2025

CBO lowballs coverage losses if Republicans defund the ACA Medicaid expansion

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Cuts may be more unkinder than portrayed

As Republicans in the House and Senate continue to tussle over various options for cutting hundreds of billions of dollars in federal Medicaid spending, the Congressional Budget Office has dropped a gift for those who favor defunding the ACA Medicaid expansion.

The ACA expansion, which the Supreme Court made optional for states, opens Medicaid to adults with income below 138% of the Federal Poverty Level. To make that coverage affordable for states, the ACA established a permanent 90% Federal Medical Assistance Percentage (FMAP) for those rendered eligible by the expansion. For other Medicaid eligibility categories — children, Aged, Blind and Disabled, and low-income seniors, the federal FMAP ranges by state from 50-77%, varying according to state per capita income.

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In a report released yesterday estimating the fiscal and coverage effects of five Medicaid cost-cutting options Republicans are considering,* CBO produced surprisingly low estimates of the coverage losses that would result from Republicans defunding the ACA Medicaid expansion.


Of the five cost-cutting options CMS considered,* I want to focus first and foremost on two of them:

  • Option 1 would repeal the ACA expansion’s 90% Federal Medical Assistance Percentage (FMAP), paying only each state’s match rate for all other populations (ranging from 50% to 77%) for the expansion population (adults with income below 138% FPL).

  • Option 4 would impose a per-enrollee inflation cap on federal spending for the ACA expansion population alone. KFF estimates that such a “per capita cap, using the most likely inflation measure (CPI-U plus 0.4%), would ratchet the expansion FMAP down to 69% by 2034.

According to CMS’s most recent tally (June 2024), the federal government pays the 90% FMAP for 20.9 million adults rendered eligible by expansion criteria (income under 138% of the Federal Poverty Level).**

CBO estimates that repealing the expansion’s 90% FMAP outright would reduce Medicaid enrollment by 5.5 million and increase the uninsured population by 2.4 million. Imposing per capita caps on the expansion population would reduce enrollment by 3.3 million and increase the ranks of the uninsured by 1.5 million.

Those estimates assume that most states will not end eligibility for the expansion population — whether quickly, if the 90% FMAP is repealed outright, or somewhat more slowly, if it’s eroded over time by per capita caps. That’s surprising.

The estimates “do seem low,” Larry Levitt of KFF told me in an email. Matt Fiedler of the Brookings Institute agreed. “I think they are on the low side. I think I would bet on states cutting back more aggressively, although I think it’s also fair to say that there is a lot of uncertainty here.” Edwin Park of Georgetown University wrote, “CBO is likely overly conservative here because it's unlikely that states in reality would be able to replace half of the cost shift in the face of all of these cuts.”

Park’s last point is key. Explaining the basis of its estimates, CBO spells out its assumption that “on average, states would replace roughly half of the reduced funds with their own resources.”

That assumption raises expert eyebrows. By CBO’s estimate, eliminating the ACA’s 90% match rate for the expansion population would reduce federal payment to states for expansion enrollment by $860 billion over ten years. That total includes the effects of states reducing benefits and provider payments. The ten-year federal payment reduction before state response is estimated at $516 billion.

All states but Alaska are required by their Constitutions or state law to balance their budgets. By KFF’s estimate, the 40 states (plus D.C.) that have enacted the expansion collectively would have to spend $626 billion over ten years to make up the federal shortfall resulting from repeal of the ACA’s 90% FMAP. New Jersey has estimated the annual cost of FMAP to the state budget at $2.2 billion (in an annual budget of $56 billion). As anyone who’s followed any state’s annual budget deliberations can testify, states don’t raise billions in new revenue lightly. It is highly questionable whether any state would be able to maintain the expansion in its entirety at the state’s own FMAP (especially wealthy states, where the FMAP is just 50% or slightly higher). On May 1, prior to the CBO report release, Park assessed the odds as follows:

Faced with such massive cost shifts under these proposals alone [90% FMAP repeal or per capital caps for the expansion group], states would either have to dramatically raise taxes, cut other parts of their budget like education, deeply cut the rest of their Medicaid program, or as is most likely, eventually drop the expansion.

It’s possible that a handful of determined Democratic-led states would maintain the expansion for enrollees with income up to 100% FPL (as Wisconsin does at present, without the 90% FMAP), which would place those in the 100-138% FPL bracket into marketplace coverage, for which the federal government pays 100% of the cost. But those blue states are also mostly wealthy states with low FMAPs — e.g., 50% for California, New York, Illinois, and others.

Under the assumption that no state would maintain coverage to 138% FPL, enrollment declines would likely top 15 million.

In fact, 12 states have “trigger” laws requiring them to end the expansion if the expansion FMAP is reduced. While there is some ambiguity and flexibility in how some states might interpret those triggers, Georgetown’s Adam Searing notes that nine of them would all but certainly have to terminate coverage immediately if the expansion’s 90% FMAP is repealed. Should all of them do so, the Center for American Progress has tallied the enrollment losses at 3.6 million. (Subtract the three states with more flexible triggers — Idaho, Iowa and New Mexico — and the total is 3.1 million.) Under CBO’s estimate, that would suggest coverage losses in 28 non-triggered states of just 2-odd million.

It seems unlikely that losses would be that low. CBO’s estimates virtually assume that the expansion would be maintained in high-population states such as California (which has 5 million expansion enrollees), New York (2.1 million), Illinois (843,000), and Pennsylvania (832,000).

Per capita caps

Capping payments for the expansion population would ratchet down the expansion FMAP annually rather than in one fell swoop. As mentioned above, KFF estimates that the FMAP would drop to 69% over ten years — and, I would add, would continue to drop in a second decade, assuming that any policy in the U.S. remains stable for that long. Because the damage is incremental, the ten-year cost deficit reduction estimate is far lower ($225 billion vs. $710 billion) — but the ultimate effect on coverage should be more or less the same (or worse in future decades, if the caps are not removed). It’s hard to imagine states maintaining coverage to 138% FPL with an FMAP under 70%.

Other options

CBO Option 3, imposing per capita caps on federal spending for the entire Medicaid population, appears to be off the table. As to Option 5, repeal of an array of Biden administration administrative measures designed to reduce friction in the application process and churn in enrollment, I have no comment, except that this repeal would be (will be, sigh) very unfortunate. Reducing administrative barriers to enrollment is a slow boring of hard boards.

Provider tax wipeout?

Option 2, limiting state taxes on health care providers (or rather, limiting payback to those providers) bears some consideration.

Provider taxes are a financial maneuver through which states plus up their federal Medicaid contribution. If a tax on a provider class does not exceed 6% of the provider’s net revenues, the state can essentially give the tax dollars back to the provider group in the form of higher payments — and receive its federal FMAP (ranging by state from 50-77%) for the extra payments.

Right-wing Paragon Health Institute head Brain Blase, deploying Gingrichian rhetoric, calls these maneuvers “money laundering.” In fact they’re the kind of kludge that state-federal partnerships and U.S. political sclerosis routinely generate: a workaround to compensate for chronic underfinancing of Medicaid, which keeps payment rates below Medicare rates and below cost for providers in many categories and places. States must propose such arrangements to CMS before implementing them, and CMS must assess the proposal and approve it. These taxes are legal, and states depend on them.

Repealing states’ ability to hold the taxed entities harmless — that is, to essentially pay the tax back, largely with federal dollars — would be very expensive for states. CBO estimates the deficit reduction effect of complete repeal of the ‘hold harmless’ option at $668 billion over ten years — nearly the same as savings from repealing the ACA FMAP ($710 billion). The gross reduction in federal outlays is slightly higher than for ACA FMAP repeal. The coverage loss estimate also is higher — 8.8 million.

The catch is that a complete wipeout of the provider payment option is highly unlikely. A more realistic option is to reduce the threshold (“safe harbor”) under which the taxed entities can be held harmless from the current 6% of revenues. A prior CBO estimate pegs the 10-year federal savings from reducing the safe harbor threshold to 2.5% at $241 billion. There would be large variation in how this measure would affect states, as the number of provider taxes and thresholds states use varies widely.

In connection with the provider taxes, Park’s analysis of the likely effects of Republican proposals makes two important points. First, a dozen states by Park’s count fund their 10% share of the ACA expansion cost via provider taxes. “Restricting provider taxes,” Park writes, “could by itself prevent some expansion states from continuing to directly rely on this state financing source for the expansion. If such states were unable to identify other revenues, they would have no choice but to eliminate their expansion.”

Second, as the last point illustrates, any combination of cuts will have a cumulative effect. As Park put it in an email to me, “With multiple cost-shifts, it's hard to see how states can compensate for any of them in combination.” CBO perhaps had to consider the five options for which Wyden and Pallone requested analysis (see note at bottom) in isolation, because they are not part of an actual bill, and no one knows which, if any, Republicans will put into legislation. But that limitation will likely limit stakeholders’ perception of the damage these cuts may inflict as they consider CBO’s projections.

- - -

* CMS considered these five options at the request of Democrats Ron Wyden, ranking member of the Senate Finance Committee, and Frank Pallone, ranking member of the House Energy & Commerce Committee.

** Of those, 4.3 million would have been eligible under pre-ACA eligibility criteria in a handful of states that obtained waivers to expand coverage, with the largest numbers in New York (1.8 million, Puerto Rico (634,000), Massachusetts (393,000) and Louisiana (216,000).

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Wednesday, April 16, 2025

House Republican "moderates" sign on to gutting the ACA Medicaid expansion

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Punchbowl News provides valuable daily intelligence as to the progress of the Republican reconciliation package, but they have this story exactly backwards:'

The red lines begin: A dozen House Republicans say no to big Medicaid cuts

News: If you’re looking for a sign that House Republicans are getting worried about cuts to Medicaid, here it is.

A dozen House Republicans are warning GOP leaders that they won’t back a reconciliation package that includes massive cuts to Medicaid, according to a letter first obtained by Punchbowl News.

What the letter* actually does is sign onto the hard-right Republican plan, advanced by House Energy and Commerce Chair Brett Guthrie, to defund the ACA Medicaid expansion, which covers 20 million low-income adults. Ending the ACA’s 90% federal funding for the expansion population yields $561 billion in “savings” over ten years, according to the Congressional Budget Office. It’s the centerpiece of meeting the $880 billion 10-year cut target established for the Energy and Commerce Committee by the House budget resolution.

Tuesday, April 01, 2025

Tell Congress: Hands off Medicaid!

 

Tell Congress: Hands off Medicaid!

·      Huge cuts to Medicaid are pending: The budget resolution that passed the House with no Democratic votes directs the Energy & Commerce Committee to cut federal spending by $880 billion in ten years – almost all of which would have to come from Medicaid.

·     The Affordable Care Act’s Medicaid expansion is on the chopping block: The ACA provides Medicaid to 21 million poor and near-poor adults (550,000 in our state). House Republican leadership has made it clear that they intend to eliminate dedicated federal funding for the ACA Medicaid expansion – a $650 billion spending cut.

·       Uninsuring millions: If the federal 90% contribution for “expansion” enrollees is eliminated, no state will be able to afford to maintain the expansion.  Based on past estimates by the Congressional Budget Office, 15-20 million people will lose coverage.

·      Republicans are lying about their plans: Republican leadership, and on-board representatives  like Tom Kean Jr. (NJ-7), say that they will “protect” Medicaid for children, seniors and the disabled and only cut “waste, fraud, and abuse.” In Republican-speak, “waste” means coverage for low-income adults.

·      Say no to work requirements: Republicans also aim to make all states impose “work requirements” on most adult Medicaid enrollees – though the vast majority of non-disabled enrollees either work or are caregivers or students.  Work requirements have been tried – and the red tape drives eligible Medicaid recipients off the rolls in droves – as Republicans intend.

Take Action

·       Contact NJ’s Republican House Reps: Tell them Hands off Medicaid! Preserve the ACA Medicaid expansion. Say no to work requirements.

Jeff Van Drew (NJ-2) --  (202) 225-6572 or ( 609) 625-5008
Chris Smith (NJ-4) –  (202) 225-3765 or (732) 780-3035
Tom Kean Jr. (NJ-7) -- (202) 225-5361 or  (908) 547-3307

Van Drew and Smith, both of whom would prefer not to cut Medicaid, are receptive to out-of-district calls; Kean, not so much.


Thursday, March 13, 2025

The Tom Kean code: ACA Medicaid expansion is "waste"

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See 3/17/25 update at bottom.

A man may smile, and smile, and uninsure 20 million

I have an op-ed up this today on nj.com decoding a statement by the famously uncommunicative Rep. Tom Kean Jr. (R-NJ-7) that signals in Republican-speak that he’s on board with defunding the ACA Medicaid expansion. Below is the TLDR:

* * *

How will Republicans honor Trump’s promise not to “touch” Medicaid while reducing federal funding for the program by hundreds of billions of dollars? Leave it to purported “moderate” Rep Tom Kean Jr. (NJ-7) to channel the emerging MAGA party line. On March 6, Kean told the Record:

I support strong Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid programs for those who depend on them. Children, seniors, and those who are disabled rely on these crucial programs…I do not support these programs being riddled with waste, fraud, and abuse — that is a direct threat to their actual missions.

While Kean vows to protect coverage for children, seniors, and the disabled, note the group of Medicaid enrollees his vow excludes: low-income adults who are not on disability. That’s the group rendered eligible for Medicaid by the Affordable Care Act. They are the “waste” Republicans propose to uninsure to help fund the resolution’s target $4.5 trillion in tax cuts for corporations and the wealthy....

Friday, November 26, 2021

Almost a quarter of all emergency SEP enrollees in ACA marketplace should have been in Medicaid

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For years, we have had to infer what percentage of ACA marketplace enrollees in states that have refused to enact the ACA Medicaid expansion have incomes below 138% FPL -- the Medicaid eligibility threshold in expansion states. It's a very large percentage, but as CMS's enrollment reports usually break out income in increments of 50 FPL percentage points, e.g., 100-150% FPL, it has to be inferred.

Just once, in 2016, CMS did provide enrollment results by state for the 100-138% FPL income range as well as for the broader 100-150% FPL bracket. In nonexpansion states, the former was about 85% of the latter. For years since, I've used 85% as a benchmark to estimate down from 100-150% FPL for the "should-have-been-in-Medicaid" cohort.

The final enrollment report for the 2021 emergency Special Enrollment Period, which ran from Feb. 15 to Aug. 15 in the 36 HealthCare.gov states, provides a tantalizing hint: 33% of all enrollment in those states was in the 100-138% FPL bracket. (All nonexpansion states use HealthCare.gov.) But what percentage of those were in the 13 states that had not expanded Medicaid as of the SEP period? (I'm including Oklahoma, which opened the Medicaid expansion gate on July 1 of this year.) 

Thursday, July 22, 2021

Obamacare enrollment in nonexpansion states is up 26% year-over-year and 41% since June 2019 (estimate)

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Not to indulge in monomania, I want to offer a clearer snapshot than previously of really major marketplace enrollment gains in the pandemic period in states that had not enacted the ACA Medicaid expansion as of June 30 of this year.  As the uninsured rate in the nonexpansion states was nearly double the rate in expansion states as of 2019 (15.5% vs. 8.3%),  particularly rapid enrollment growth in those states -- most of it at low incomes -- is having a significant impact where help is most needed.

Every June, CMS publishes "effectuated" (i.e., paid-up) enrollment in each state as of February of that year. Those reports also break out monthly enrollment by state in the year prior. This year, that information is supplemented by monthly reports on off-season enrollment, stimulated this year by an emergency Special Enrollment Period (SEP), running from February 15 through August 15 in the 36 states using HealthCare.gov, which is the functional equivalent of a second Open Enrollment Period (the 15 states that run their own exchanges have also opened emergency SEPs.) The SEP reports provide enough data, or so I assume below, to estimate effectuated enrollment through June 30 of this year.

By my estimate, enrollment in 13 nonexpansion states as of June 30 -- excluding Wisconsin, for reasons discussed below -- is up 26% year-over-year, and 41% since in June 2019. That's a two-year increase of 1.74 million.  Enrollment is up by more than 50% since June 2019 in Texas, Georgia and Mississippi. It's up by almost 500,000 in Texas and by more than 650,000 in Florida.

Monday, May 03, 2021

UI effect? ACA marketplace enrollment soared at low incomes in nonexpansion states in 2021

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Back in March 2020,  you may have read here that the emergency supplemental unemployment insurance provided by the CARES Act -- $600 per week for up to 4 months -- would likely lift some uninsured people in states that had refused to expand Medicaid out of the so-called "coverage gap." That is, the extra UI income would raise some low income people over the income threshold for marketplace subsidy eligibility in nonexpansion states: 100% of the Federal Poverty Level (FPL).

Back in December, you may have read here that as of the end of Open Enrollment for 2021, marketplace enrollment was indeed up 10% over 2020 levels in nonexpansion states, but flat in expansion states.

This month, you may have read here that takeup of marketplace coverage at incomes just over the subsidy eligibility threshold in nonexpansion states -- 100-138% FPL -- has historically been weak -- under 50% in of these states states.

More detailed data about 2021 enrollment was released by CMS on April 21. I don't think it's an exaggeration to say that enrollment at the lowest subsidy-eligible income levels in nonexpansion states exploded this year. 

Friday, April 09, 2021

Where Medicaid enrollment growth may be concentrated

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I just stumbled on a little Medicaid factoid (ex-post, as always...) that made my eyes pop.  

As I've been noting for months, enrollment growth during the pandemic in the ACA Medicaid expansion population has been about double the rate of overall Medicaid enrollment growth -- about 30% for expansion population, February 2020 to February 2021, versus about 15% overall. 

The locus of rapid enrollment growth can perhaps be narrowed further. Arizona breaks out the ACA expansion population into two income categories: 0-100% FPL and 100-138% FPL. From April 2020 to April 2021, enrollment in the 0-100% FPL category increased by 21% from 133,514 to 204, 298.  In the 100-138% FPL category, enrollment increased by 94%, from 76,121 to 147,775.

Tuesday, April 06, 2021

Is the U.S. uninsured rate at an all-time low?

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Enough states have reported Medicaid tallies through February to posit that the pandemic has increased enrollment by more than ten million nationally since February 2020. Adjusting for the usual difference* between CMS's official totals (now posted through November**) and my sample below (based on state monthly reports), year-over-year enrollment growth since February 2020 is likely about 14.8%, and total enrollment likely stands at about 81.7 million. A quarter of the U.S. population is enrolled in Medicaid.

I don't think we've fully fathomed the effect on access to health insurance of the pandemic, the battered and flawed but still functioning and funded ACA programs in place as the pandemic hit, and pandemic relief measures.  Consider...

The Families First Act effectively required states to pause Medicaid disenrollments for the duration of the Covid-19 emergency, and enrollment will continue to grow until that moratorium ends.***  Enrollment growth among those rendered eligible by the ACA Medicaid expansion is close to 30%. In the ACA marketplace, average monthly enrollment in 2021 will probably exceed 2019 enrollment by at least a million, perhaps more, spurred by extended Special Enrollment Periods and subsidies enhanced by the American Rescue Plan Act. As the population ages, Medicare enrollment grows by about 1.5 million yearly. Meanwhile, the huge job losses triggered by the pandemic appear to have had only a modest effect on employer-sponsored insurance: enrollment through September was down by just 2-3 million, according to a KFF estimate.

Wednesday, March 17, 2021

Medicaid expansion enrollment grew nearly 30% year-over-year in 19-state sample

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Time for an update on Medicaid expansion enrollment growth since the pandemic struck. Below is a sampling of 19 expansion states through January of this year, and 14 states through February.

Maintaining the assumption, explained here, that relatively slow growth in California would push the national total down by about 2.5 percentage points, these tallies still point toward year-over-year enrollment growth pushing 30% from February 2020 to February 2021. If that's right, then Medicaid enrollment among those rendered eligible by ACA expansion criteria (adults with income up to 138% FPL) may exceed 19 million nationally and may be pushing 20 million.  That is, if this sampling of a bit more than a third of total expansion enrollment represents all expansion states more or less accurately, again accounting for slower growth in California.

Saturday, January 30, 2021

Estimate: ACA Medicaid expansion enrollment may have grown 25% from February to December 2020

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As Covid-19 burned its swath through the U.S. in December, Medicaid enrollment in the ACA expansion category (adults with monthly incomes up to 138% of the Federal Poverty Level) continued the rapid growth that started with the pandemic.

Enrolment increased 2.7% from November in the 17 states for which I've been able to locate monthly expansion-category enrollment reported through December. In those 17 states, enrollment increased 27.6% from February 2020 -- the last month in which the economy was unaffected by the pandemic -- through December.

Friday, January 08, 2021

The 117th Congress should end Medicaid Estate Recovery for the ACA Medicaid expansion population

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n.b. 4/7/21: see update from 2021 MACPAC report at bottom

Democrats have big plans on the healthcare front, only some of which they're likely to push through Congress with a threadbare Senate majority. Look for some sweetening of ACA marketplace subsidies and meaningful action to contain prescription drug prices. 

First, though, some housekeeping. The first healthcare bill advanced in the 117th Congress will likely render moot Texas v. California,  the suit now before the Supreme Court seeking to have the ACA declared unconstitutional. A single sentence, either restoring an individual mandate penalty of $1 or repealing the mandate and declaring in severable from the rest of the ACA, should suffice.

For their second act, Democrats should take up a bill introduced just last month by Rep. Steve King (R). Yes, that Steve King, ex of Iowa's 4th District, the notorious racist who was defeated in a primary last June and is no longer in the House.

Tuesday, December 29, 2020

The ACA as pandemic safety net

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In the New York Times Upshot, Margot Sanger-Katz, Sarah Kliff and Quocktrung Bui report that the health insurance safety net as bolstered by the ACA, patchy though it is, appears to have held the uninsured rate close to steady during the pandemic months. In brief: Medicaid enrollment in the ACA expansion category is up more than 20% since February; ACA marketplace enrollment in 36 HealthCare.gov states is up 6.6% for 2021, and losses of employer-sponsored health insurance appear relatively modest.

I have been tracking these developments as they unfold. Some of the posts below corroborate the core findings cited in Upshot, and some supplement those findings. In reverse chronological order:

  • ACA marketplace enrollment was already up by more than 6% year-over-year by June 2020
  • Medicaid enrollment among those rendered eligible by the ACA Medicaid expansion is up more than 20% since February and likely exceeds 18 million.

  • In states that have so far refused to enact the ACA Medicaid expansion, the ACA marketplace has picked up some slack: in nonexpansion states, marketplace enrollment is up 10% in 2021.

Tuesday, November 03, 2020

If Republicans had succeeded in ACA repeal in 2017: state snapshots

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Last week, David Anderson, Louise Norris and I looked at how many more Americans would be uninsured if the Republican effort in 2017 to "repeal and replace" the ACA's core programs had succeeded, as it very nearly did (90% of Republicans in Congress voted for the main House or Senate bills). 

"Repeal and replace" was a misnomer: the Republican bills would have established an inadequate replacement for the marketplace -- but simply ended the ACA Medicaid expansion, which has had more impact. According to CBO projections, the repeal bills would have reduced Medicaid enrollment by 8 to 9 by this year, and by 14-15 million as of 2024, when the phase-out of enhanced federal funding for the expansion population would be complete. With the expansion intact, Medicaid enrollment has increased by about 8 million during the pandemic. Enrollment by those specifically rendered eligible by the ACA has increased by about 20% since February.

We also prepared several state-specific versions, as frankly we were apparently caught in a pre-election op-ed tsunami and couldn't quickly place the original.  Below, I've pasted state-specific outtakes.

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Pennsylvania

In Pennsylvania, as the repeal bills were being voted on, 754,000 Medicaid enrollees owed their eligibility to ACA expansion criteria. All would likely have lost Medicaid coverage had repeal passed...

...in February 2020, just before the pandemic caused economic havoc, 12 million adult Medicaid enrollees were rendered eligible by the ACA, and 9.2 million enrollees in the ACA private plan marketplace received federal subsidies that paid for an average of 76% of their premiums. In Pennsylvania, 267,000 marketplace enrollees were subsidized as of February...

[Re Medicaid enrollment during the pandemic] By June, according to the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services, Medicaid enrollment had grown to 75 million — an increase of 4 million since February. Enrollment growth has continued throughout this pandemic. It is likely now stands at 78 million. In Pennsylvania, enrollment increased by 178,000 from February through July. 

Michigan

Both the AHCA and the BCRA would have sharply reduced the ACA's premium subsidies in the individual market for health insurance and would have rendered the available coverage virtually unusable for millions of low-income enrollees by eliminating the ACA's Cost Sharing Reduction subsidies – currently accessed by 96,000 Michiganders, while 212,000 receive federal premium subsidies that pay for an average of 76% of their premiums...

In Michigan, 800,000 current Medicaid enrollees owe their eligibility to ACA expansion criteria. All would likely have lost Medicaid coverage had repeal passed. Since the pandemic started triggering massive job loss, Medicaid enrollment enabled by the ACA expansion  has increased by 20 percent. None of the 130,000 “expansion” enrollees who have gained coverage in Michigan since this past February would have been eligible had the 2017 repeal effort succeeded.

Illinois

In Illinois, 273,000 marketplace enrollees were subsidized as of February 2020, while more than 631,000 current Medicaid enrollees owe their eligibility to ACA expansion criteria. More than 500,000 of them would likely have lost Medicaid coverage had repeal passed...

Both the AHCA and the BCRA would have sharply reduced the ACA's premium subsidies in the individual market for health insurance and would have rendered the available coverage virtually unusable for millions of low-income enrollees by eliminating the ACA's Cost Sharing Reduction subsidies, currently received by 118,000 enrollees in Illinois.

*          *          *

Complete nullification of the ACA via the patently fraudulent Texas v. California suit, brought by 20 Republican attorneys general and governors  and now before the Supreme Court, is current Republican policy, urged by the Trump administration (at Trump's insistence). Success would increase the ranks of the uninsured by 23 million, according to an estimate by the Center for American Progress. Charles Gaba, who assisted in the analysis, has broken out projected losses by Congressional district.

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Thursday, October 22, 2020

September update: ACA Medicaid expansion enrollment up 19% since February in 16-state sample

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Time for an update on "expansion" Medicaid enrollment in the pandemic months -- new enrollees since February rendered eligible by ACA expansion criteria. That is, adults with household income below 138% of the Federal Poverty Level who are not blind or disabled or eligible according to other pre-ACA criteria.

In 16 states that have reported expansion-category enrollees through September, enrollment in this category is up 19.2% since February, and 1.9% since August. That points toward perhaps 2.9 million new enrollees in this category -- minus perhaps 400,000 in California, which has had mysteriously weak Medicaid enrollment growth in the pandemic. A bit more than 2 million have likely been rendered "newly eligible" by the ACA.  See the previous post on pandemic expansion enrollment for details.

Pandemic Medicaid "expansion" enrollment in 16 states
February through September 2020


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Monday, October 12, 2020

Job losses and the uninsured rate in the pandemic: A one-state snapshot

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Let's try a somewhat ambiguous one-state snapshot -- in New Jersey, my home state --  of the extent to which ACA programs may have blunted an increase in the uninsured population during the months when Covid-19 triggered huge increases in unemployment. 

According to the New Jersey Department of Labor, job losses due to the pandemic peaked at about 835,500 and stood at 426,110 as of August. Estimates of the ratio between the number of people losing jobs and the number losing insurance vary quite a bit, and the ratio probably varies quite a bit by state, depending on the types of jobs lost. The pandemic created novel conditions, in which a fair number of workers were furloughed and were able to keep their job-based insurance, at least for a while. 

In New Jersey, as in most states that enacted the ACA Medicaid expansion, Medicaid is the primary safety net for the newly uninsured.  Enrollees rendered eligible by the expansion -- adults with incomes up to 138% of the Federal Poverty Level -- are driving rapid growth in Medicaid enrollment in the state. Here's the story since February: 

Medicaid Enrollment Growth in New Jersey in the Pandemic

Coverage group

Feb 2020

Sept 2020

Increase Feb-Sept

% increase Feb-Sep

ACA expansion adults

    510,850

   597,002

  86,152

16.9%

Non-ABD children

    773,544

   835,543

  61,999

 8.0%

All Medicaid

1,682,621

1,853,928

171,307

10.2%

Source: NJ FamilyCare Monthly Enrollment Statistics

Friday, October 02, 2020

Medicaid enrollment (likely) up 9% since February

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As my post tracking pandemic Medicaid enrollment through August has gotten rather clotted with updates, I've posted the totals afresh below.

The big addition is California. The state has adjusted its August tally to a slight increase, in line with those of prior months, which have also been adjusted.  I am using the raw totals from the state database of certified eligibles. California's adjusted totals show a slightly bigger increase than previously, but still well below national averages, a mystery examined here. Adding California pulls down the 32-state increase from February through August by 1.7 percentage points.

For context and discussion of some data issues, such as how I reconcile states that report monthly totals  as of the beginning or end of each month, please see the prior post. In particular, the most recent update at the top of that post explains the basis of my estimate that Medicaid enrollment nationally is somewhere between 77.3 million and 77.6 million as of August, based on what's now a 32-state sample below. 

In brief, the 51-state enrollment increase from February thru August is probably about 9%. Nationally, Medicaid enrollment is now about 37% higher than it was in the third quarter of 2013, the pre-ACA point of comparison.

As the chart text was getting rather small, I've removed columns providing info about the programs each state tracks and the extent to which their tracking matches CMS's. See note, and chart with those columns retained, at bottom.

Thursday, October 01, 2020

Trump's healthcare plan, revealed


Let it not be said that Trump doesn't have a healthcare plan. It's this:

  • Defund the ACA marketplace and Medicaid expansion
  • Strangle Medicaid long-term via block grants or per capita caps
  • Privatize Medicare
Oh right, that's the healthcare plan of the entire Republican Party.  

I have a post up on the BlueWaveNJ that lays this program out:

Wednesday, September 30, 2020

Estimate: ACA Medicaid expansion enrollment has increased by more than 2 million in the pandemic

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Ever since I was a child -- okay, ever since the ACA was a child -- I've been reading that 12 million Medicaid enrollees were rendered newly eligible by the ACA Medicaid expansion, which extended eligibility to adults with incomes up to 138% of the Federal Poverty Level (e.g., $1468 per month for an individual, $1303/month for a family of four). That's been the case since July 2016, rounding up from 11.6 million at that point. In June 2019, the last month tallied by CMS, enrollment of the "newly eligible" stood at 12.0 million.

A larger number -- 15.3 million in June 2019 -- are rendered eligible by ACA criteria and not by standard pre-ACA criteria. But 3.3 million of them are in states that had expanded adult eligibility to at least 100% FPL pre-ACA*. The federal government pays the ACA's enhanced "match rate" of 90% of costs for this larger group, classified as Group VIII.

Nationally, total Medicaid enrollment shrank by about 5% from early 2017 to early 2020.  Then came the pandemic.  As the economy crashed, Medicaid enrollment surged. It has probably increased by more than 6 million from the end of February through August. Here I'd like to venture an estimate, based on the enrollment data below: about 2.2 million of the new enrollees are ACA expansion enrollees. That would put current Group VIII enrollment at about 17.5 million.

If we assume that 78% of the new Group VIII enrollees are "newly eligible," that comes to about 1.7 million, raising current "newly eligible" enrollment to about 13.7 million. These enrollees stand to lose their coverage if the Supreme Court voids the ACA in its entirely.  And new enrollment triggered by the ACA expansion is far from over. In my 28-state tally (second chart here), the increase from July to August, 1.5%, is the same as from June to July.

Wednesday, September 23, 2020

At The American Prospect: Medicaid, the ACA's mainstay


As in 2018, political warfare over healthcare -- now escalating in the wake of Ruth Bader Ginsburg's death -- is focused on "protection for people with pre-existing conditions." While the war of words focuses on rules governing the individual market for health insurance, which insures about 3% of the population, the real fight is over the extent to which the federal government will subsidize health insurance for those who lack access to employer-sponsored insures. The pre-existing condition that matters most is low income.

The main engine by which the ACA has reduced the uninsured population is Medicaid. Obscuring this fact distorts our political debate as well as federal and state government response to the pandemic.  I made that case in 2018 in USA Today, and today I've made it again in The American Prospect: