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Home :  Federal Budget & Tax : 
Federal Budget & Tax:      News     Blog     Background    



Friday, February 15, 2008

Multiple Rules Work in Concert to Undermine Medicaid

The Bush administration is pursuing or has achieved several policy goals that work to cut social support services by reducing federal funding for Medicaid programs. The Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) has released all of these policies — three proposed rules, one interim final rule, and two final rules — in the past nine months.

Two recent reports (one by the Center for Budget and Policy Priorities and one by the Kaiser Family Foundation) link the policies together to show a uniform attack by the Bush administration on federal support of state Medicaid programs. From the Kaiser report:

The Administration views these regulatory changes as promoting the purposes of Medicaid by enhancing the integrity of the program. However, states argue that many of the regulations could limit flexibility in administering the program and could impede the ability of the Medicaid program to fulfill some of its critical roles in the health care system such as providing support to safety-net providers or providing long-term care supports in the least restrictive settings.

Basically, the new rules undermine Medicaid benefits by placing an increasing burden on the states. "Each of the regulations is expected to reduce federal Medicaid spending by directly limiting the level of provider reimbursement, restricting the scope of services eligible for federal match and by limiting states' ability to finance their Medicaid programs," according to the Kaiser report. By reducing federal spending, states would be forced to either cut benefits or pick up the slack financially.

Some of these rules represent efforts by the Bush administration to circumvent Congress. For example, one of the proposed rules would limit the ability of state governments to provide rehabilitation services (such as transitions to independent housing) for people with mental illnesses or developmental disabilities. According to the Kaiser report, the Bush administration proposed this limitation as a legislative provision in 2006, but Congress rejected it.

These are exactly the kind of administrative changes we should expect the Bush administration to pursue in its waning days of power. Confronted by a Democratically-controlled Congress and election-year politics, the administration will try to accomplish administratively what it cannot accomplish legislatively.



Posted by Matt Madia, 12:49:28 PM



Monday, February 11, 2008

Bush Budget Continues to Disappoint

President Bush's FY 2009 budget continues to receive poor reviews into its second week. We reviewed a number of those reactions last week (see our summary posts here and here), and below are some additional disappointed reviews:





Posted by Adam Hughes, 12:20:59 PM



Friday, February 08, 2008

House Approves Senate-Revised Stimulus Package, Heads to President's Desk

The House voted (380-34) to approve an economic stimulus package passed by the Senate hours earlier. The measure now awaits the president's signature.

Congress has decided that the hungry, the unemployed, and the cold should continue to go without adequate food, adequate income, and adequate heat, because putting money into their hands would do little stimulate the economy as they probably wouldn't spend it.



Posted by Craig Jennings, 09:53:46 AM



Tuesday, February 05, 2008

Reactions to Bush's Budget Begin to Appear

The day after President Bush released his $3.1 trillion budget for FY 2009, analysts and advocacy groups have begun to roll out reactions and statements on the proposal. Below are a few out so far:

CBPP: Federal Grants to State and Localities Cut Deeply
CBPP: The Dubious Priorities of the President's Budget
FRAC: Statement on Nutrition Program Changes in Budget
NWLC: Bush Budget Locks in Gains for the Rich, Short Changes Women and Families

We'll post more statements and analyses as they are released. OMB Watch's overview of the budget will be released this afternoon in the next edition of The Watcher (Sign up here if you don't receive The Watcher).





Posted by Adam Hughes, 09:57:56 AM



Friday, February 01, 2008

CBO Director Orszag Testifies on Costs of Health Care

Yesterday, CBO Director Peter Orszag testified before the Senate Budget Committee on the rising costs of health care. He emphasized that technological change in health care is the primary driver of health care cost, and not population aging. Furthermore, it is the rising cost of the health care that is the underlying cause of the nation's long-term fiscal challenge.

In fact, spending on Medicare and Medicaid are projected to increase from today's 4 percent of GDP to 19 percent 2082, while the nation's total spending on health care will reach 49 percent of GDP in 2082 - up from today's 16 percent. So, although federal spending on Medicare and Medicaid will eat a larger portion on GDP, that spending is merely reflective of the much larger issue of the cost of health care for all Americans.

Orszag's testimony ultimately underscores two very important points about the nation's long-term fiscal challenge:

  1. Social Security is not part of the problem; health care costs are
  2. The aging of the Baby Boom generation is not the problem; advances in health care technology are

CBO: Growth in Health Care Costs: Statement of Peter R. Orszag Director before the Committee on the Budget United States Senate January 31, 2008

CBO: Supporting Charts, Growth in Health Care Costs

CBO: Technological Change and the Growth of Health Care Spending

CBO: The Long-Term Outlook for Health Care Spending



Posted by Craig Jennings, 11:47:40 AM




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