Moderated by Tom Sabulis
Georgia should not establish a state health exchange under the auspices of Obamacare, argues a writer with a libertarian think tank. After all, the state will have no real control over the exchange. It would cost too much and would also mean higher taxes. But a local health policy expert says it’s a great deal for citizens who can take advantage of new federal tax credits to purchase private health insurance and will see billions pumped into the state economy.
Commenting is open below Tim Sweeney’s column.
By Michael F. Cannon
President Barack Obama has won re-election, and his administration has asked Georgia officials to decide by today whether the state will create one of ObamaCare’s health insurance “exchanges.” Georgia also has to decide whether to implement the law’s massive expansion of Medicaid. The correct answer to both questions remains a resounding no.
State-created exchanges mean higher taxes, fewer jobs, and less protection of religious freedom. States are better off defaulting to a federal exchange. The Medicaid expansion is likewise too costly and risky a proposition. Since the election, many state officials have stood by pledges to implement neither provision. Gov. Bob McDonnell (R-Va.), chairman of the Republican Governors Association and who was on the fence prior to the election, has announced Virginia will implement neither.
There are many arguments against creating an exchange.
- State officials are under no obligation to create one.
- Operating an ObamaCare exchange would be illegal in the 14 states that have enacted either statutes or constitutional amendments (or both) forbidding state employees to participate in an essential exchange function: implementing ObamaCare’s individual and employer mandates. Georgia is one of those states.
- State officials would have to find an estimated $10 million to $100 million per year to run it, raising the prospect of tax increases.
- Today’s deadline is no more real than the “deadlines” for implementing REAL ID, which have been pushed back repeatedly since 2008. Georgia can always create an exchange later if officials choose.
- A state-created exchange is not a state-controlled exchange. All exchanges will be controlled by Washington.
- Congress authorized no funds for federal “fallback” exchanges. So Washington may not be able to impose an exchange on Georgia after all.
- The Obama administration has yet to provide crucial information that Georgia officials need before they can make an informed decision.
- Creating an exchange sets Georgia officials up to take the blame when ObamaCare increases insurance premiums and denies care to the sick.
- Creating an exchange would be assisting in the creation of a “public option” — a federally chartered health plan that thus enjoys special perks and could drive Georgia’s insurance carriers out of business through unfair competition.
- Defaulting to a federal exchange exempts Georgia employers from the employer mandate (a tax of $2,000 per worker per year), and exempts 625,000 Georgia residents from the individual mandate (a tax of $2,085 per family of four). Avoiding those taxes will improve Georgia’s prospects for job creation. It will also protect the conscience rights of Georgia employers and residents from the Obama administration’s contraceptives mandate.
- Finally, rejecting an exchange will reduce the federal deficit. ObamaCare only offers its deficit-financed subsidies to private health insurance companies through state-created exchanges. If all states declined to create one, federal deficits would fall by roughly $700 billion over 10 years.
The Supreme Court gave states the option of not implementing ObamaCare’s Medicaid expansion. Georgia should refuse to implement that new entitlement for similar reasons.
Medicaid is rife with waste and fraud. It increases the cost of private health care and insurance, crowds out private health insurance and long-term care insurance, and discourages enrollees from climbing the economic ladder. There is scant reliable evidence that Medicaid improves health outcomes, and no evidence that it is a cost-effective way of doing so.
Michael F. Cannon is director of health policy studies at the Cato Institute, a libertarian think tank.
By Tim Sweeney
Rather than continue the political debate over the Affordable Care Act, Georgia’s leaders should seize the opportunity it offers to make affordable health insurance available to more Georgians, particularly by expanding Medicaid.
Georgia already ranks near the bottom when it comes to health coverage, and failing to implement provisions of the law that will cover more Georgians would simply aggravate the problem.
Expanding Medicaid, a decision the Supreme Court left up to the states, could mean health coverage for more than 600,000 low-income Georgians who would likely remain uncovered otherwise. Importantly, they would have better access to primary care instead of being forced to rely on sporadic, expensive emergency room care that Georgians with insurance often end up paying the tab for through higher premiums.
The expansion is also a great deal for Georgia, as new federal funds will cover all of the costs for newly eligible Georgians in the first few years, and at least 90 percent of the costs in the long term. This will be good for Georgia’s economy, too, since the money will be used to pay doctors, hospitals, pharmacies and other health care providers throughout the state. In the first three years alone, the expansion could pump $8 billion into the state’s economy.
Claims that Medicaid is ineffective are wrong. To the contrary, Medicaid expansions in other states have improved health outcomes, boosted residents’ financial security, and even reduced death rates. In Georgia, Medicaid serves more than 1 million children from low-income families and is the primary payer for hundreds of thousands of elderly Georgians and people with disabilities who receive long-term care in nursing homes or community settings. Without Medicaid, many more Georgians would go without health coverage and would face increased financial hardships as a result.
National organizations opposed to health care reform are urging Republican-controlled states not to expand Medicaid in yet another effort to stall and delay the law. They are playing political games at the national level and do not have the interests of Georgia consumers and taxpayers at heart.
These groups are also lobbying against state-based private health insurance markets, or exchanges, under the guise that declining to establish one is akin to “opting-out” of Obamacare and will prevent other parts of the law from taking effect. In reality, since Georgia has failed to lay the groundwork for a state-run exchange, Georgians will instead be served by a federally facilitated exchange. While this is a missed opportunity to build an exchange tailored to our needs, a federal exchange will still allow Georgians to take advantage of new federal tax credits in 2014 to help with the purchase of private health coverage, and other parts of the law will still take effect in Georgia.
Georgia still needs to work with the federal government to ensure that Georgians are well-served by the exchange in the short term, and state policymakers should continue to examine whether a Georgia-run exchange is best for the state in the long term. The time for playing politics with health coverage is over. It’s time for Georgia to move forward and implement the law so more Georgians will have affordable health coverage and the peace of mind that comes with it.
Tim Sweeney is director of health policy at the Georgia Budget & Policy Institute.
31 comments Add your comment
MrLiberty
November 16th, 2012
3:09 pm
Virtually every problem we have in healthcare today is government-created. There is NO possible way that more government intervention will fix what government has caused. Get government out of healthcare completely.
MrLiberty
November 16th, 2012
3:06 pm
We have one guy saying that healthcare and politics shouldn’t mix and two guys who deperately want at some level for the politicians to stick their nose into healthcare. What is wrong with trying FREEDOM and actually separating politics from healthcare.
Here’s where to start:
Mandatory coverage – currently GA mandates 24 separate items that EVERY health insurance company MUST cover for every policy. These include mental health coverage, drug abuse/rehab, alcohol rehab, and others. The addition of every single mandate raises the cost of coverage. Eliminate these mandates completely and allow insurance companies to sell a’la carte policies so that individuals can purchase only what they need, thus reducing their prices.
Out of state insurance – currently GA prevents the sale of health insurance from out of state companies. Why? Aside from pure protectionism for in-state companies (or to extract taxes, etc. from companies that open state offices and deal with the state bureaucracy, there can be no other reason. Being able to purchase insurance from lower cost companies in other states would do two things – lower the cost to consumers, and encourage the legislature to make GA even more insurance friendly thus attracting even more business.
Profession licensure – Every state in the union colludes with the AMA and other so-called professional organizations (really just lobbyists) to reduce the availability of services to keep prices higher. Restrictions on who can be licensed, how much they must pay, what services they can and cannot Again, protectionism from government to disinfranchise customers, drive up prices, and restrict access to competition. These restrictions and regulations need to go. Health care providers must be held accountable for their actions, their product claims, and consumers must be allowed to chose for themselves who they wish to have perform what service for them in the healthcare realm. This would also have the immediate effect of lowering prices and providing far more competition in the healthcare sector at a time when doctor shortages, etc. are impacting the basic ability of people to even find a caregiver.
End the state war on drugs – cannabis has been well-documented over the past 10,000 years of use to be highly effective at addressing literally hundreds if not thousands of medical ailments. Plenty of other safe plant products have also been used by cultures all around the world that remain illegal because of politics, protectionist regulations (designed to provide a protected monopoly to bigPharma,etc.), and an unwillingness of spineless state legislatures to stand up to Washington thugs. Colorado and Washington states have shown us the way. Georgia too should stand up for freedom and tell Washington to stand down and allow us the freedom to decide to what degree we wish to allow persons to own their own body and control what goes into it.
I am sure that there are plenty of other government-created issues that are driving up healthcare costs. These are just the big ones. The solution in all cases is the same – FREEDOM.
Yes, let’s get politics out of health care. The only way to do that is to get GOVERNMENT out of healtcare – completely !
curious
November 16th, 2012
2:55 pm
ER doesn’t provide the comprehensive level of healthcare that will drive down the overall costs through prevention. You can save short term by not checking/changing the oil in your car, but one day the engine is going to blow up.
However, better medical care might decrease death rates and that is counter to the Republican plan to “just let’em die”.
Michael
November 16th, 2012
12:19 pm
GA OPTING DO NOTHING ON HEALTH CARE!!!….Just more “Good Ol’ Boy” Politics that run so deep in this state! All under the fog of huge miss-information by far too many “entertainment journalists/organizations and concerned citizens” that way too often make a very comfortable livings and personal gain promoting dissension; Give Me a Break!!!…what about the current state tax structure/revenues (income, property, sales, lottery…etc); you just got to know huge chunks of money are going for yet another 2-3 year study somewhere or “Grease Money” to keep the gravy train moving. GA politics has become an art form of how to look busy yet get nothing done blaming the “other guy”.
SHAME ON US FOR LETTING THIS CONTINUE IN GEORGIA AND NOT HOLDING ALL ACCOUNTABLE…Lost jobs, a very sluggish economy and falling standard of living is OUR FAULT for enabling one political class of PLAYING NOT TO LOOSE at CITIZEN EXPENSE.
yuzeyurbrane
November 16th, 2012
12:02 pm
Don Kramer is correct on the facts. It is about time the radical right wingnuts realize that the battle is over and it is time for pragmatic nonpartisan on implementing the law of the land. They may not like it but they had multiple chances and killing Obamacare and, with the exception of the Medicaid issue, were rejected by the Supreme Court, the American people or both. Continued lieing about the facts will not change the outcome. And, quite frankly, considering the state of Georgia governance, I am not sure if the citizens of Georgia would not be better off with a Federally run exchange.
DownInAlbany
November 16th, 2012
11:41 am
As a healthcare professional, I have followed this with great interest. It is very difficult to understand given the previous comments that even Congress doesn’t understand the full ramifications of the bill they passed. As I understand it (with the caveats above), states are not required to implement the exchanges and the feds neither have the authority or the funds to implement at the nation level. As a side note, the “deadline” has been extended to December 14, I believe.
The bottom line is this…sure, we have people who are not receiving needed healthcare, but, it’s not solely because the help is not there. Our practice does not turn anyone away, regardless, of their ability to pay. Most public hospitals are in the same boat…they are prohibited from refusing care. Unfortunately, that (the ER) is the most expensive venue to treat patients.
My point is, this law does nothing to improve healthCARE…it simply addresses heatlh INSURANCE. It does nothing to address the COST of healthcare. These are related, but, very different conversations. With insurance exchanges this is what I see happening: we, for example, provide health insurance policies for our employees (at a cost of +$800 per month). This is a benefit. We cover the entire cost. If I, as a businessman, have the option of continuing the $800 per month or pay the $2000 fine. Which makes financial sense to you? If employes take pay the fine rather than provide coverage, the employees end up in the exchange where I’m sure payments to provider will be a Medicaid type levels. This will drive many physicians out of practice, or they will refuse to accept these patients, further exaserbating the problem
VERY complicated with no easy answers…
Tim Barnes, CLU
November 16th, 2012
11:15 am
Obviously, this article was written in the past. Apparently, Kathleen Sebellius extended the deadline from November 16 to December 14 for states to declare if they were going to run their own Exchanges. As it stands now, only 17 states plus the District of Columbia have agreed to set up their own Exchanges. The rest of the states have defaulted to allow a federally run Exchange, at least for 2014.
jd
November 16th, 2012
11:07 am
Hmmm… so glad we are gonna see more jobs here in Ga… guess these jobs will arrive as soon as the ones get here because we cut taxes, eliminated class action lawsuits, cut spending on education, gutted environmental protection… Yep, we lead the nation in job creation.
Health care, politics don’t mix | Georgia Budget and Policy Institute
November 16th, 2012
10:23 am
[...] As published by the Atlanta Journal-Constitution [...]
Anne Beal
November 16th, 2012
10:20 am
People who think having health insurance means that they will get expensive cancer treatments paid for are not facing reality. When I lived in Georgia we had Blue Cross Blue Shield and it was like pulling teeth to get them to pay for ANYTHING. First they would claim they were waiting to see what the co-insurance paid. There wasn’t any co-insurance. Then they would claim that the providers had charged twice the allowable charge, so they would pay 80% of the allowable charge, and we’d have to pay the balance, or 60% of the total bills. There is nothing in Obamacare which would remedy this problem: the providers still get to charge whatever they want, and the insurance companies can continue to pay as little as they want. As long as the insurance companies spend 80% of their revenues on benefit payments, they can get away with it. There’s nothing to stop them from being generous with claims for the first few months of the year, then denying claims after they reach 80% of their revenues. So the child whose father’s policy would only pay $10,000 for a bone marrow transplant would still not get one. The notion that a state health insurance exchange will solve all these issues is just not founded in reality.