State Of The State Address: Simply Irresponsible To Propose Medicaid Expansion
It was no surprise that Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon expressed his support for expanding the state’s Medicaid program during his State of the State Address last night. When he introduced the idea in November, he called expanding Medicaid “the smart thing to do” and “the right thing to do.” At the time, I noted a glaring omission from his announcement: how he would pay for the expansion over the long haul.
He did not even bother to pay lip service to the weighty question of how he would fund it in his nearly 6,000-word address. He argued that the federal government — you and me — would pick up the entire tab until 2017, as if splitting the expansion across public credit cards mitigates the cost. That is some creative accounting that conceals an awful reality — that we would be expanding an entitlement today out of debt imposed on our children and grandchildren tomorrow. Simply inexcusable, and not addressed in his speech.
The governor cited the fact that the Missouri Chamber of Commerce supports his Medicaid expansion plans, but just because the Chamber of Commerce supports expanding Medicaid it does not make it the “right thing to do.” The Chamber’s imprimatur does not imply that the conscience of good government has been satisfied; in fact, it sometimes expresses the opposite. Lest we forget, the Chamber also endorsed Aerotropolis and later savaged legislators who have vehemently opposed corporate welfare in the state. The Chamber endorses bad policy all the time, and make no mistake, it has done so yet again with the Medicaid expansion.
Let’s be clear here:
- According to Missouri’s Office of Administration, services for newly eligible Medicaid enrollees would cost the state $54 million in fiscal year 2017, $124 million in fiscal year 2018, $155 million in fiscal year 2019, $212 million in fiscal year 2020, and $258 million in fiscal year 2021.
- In a report released last November, the Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF) found that Missouri could expect to spend more than $1.15 billion between 2013 and 2022 just on these newly eligible enrollees.
- Moreover, those figures do not account for growth in the current Medicaid population and the attendant costs of that growth. As a result of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA), states can expect to see increased enrollment in their current Medicaid programs as federal promotion of the expansion ratchets up and potential enrollees find out they qualify for state assistance. KFF found that between 2013 and 2022, Missouri could expect to pay an additional $1.6 billion for those enrollees.
If the state expands its Medicaid program, from now through 2022, Missouri would have nearly $3 billion in new Medicaid expenses — the cost of services for newly eligible enrollees plus the cost of services for currently eligible enrollees joining the program. Unfortunately, the governor chose not to address this reality.
You can read the governor’s speech here. Your thoughts are welcome in the comments.