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
An observer
November 17th, 2012
7:41 pm
Rockerbabe, your comment is well written and it seems you understand the subject. Maybe you could help all of us by reasonably explaining what is gained by each state developing its own exchange, and why those benefits will not be available in an exchange developed by the federal government? It just seems to me that the federal government can develop a very good exchange that meets the needs of the citizens of Georgia, at a lower cost than if all 50 states go off creating their own exchanges. There must be economies of scale here.
Jm
November 17th, 2012
6:44 pm
Obamacare
Bad for America
Wrong prescription
Rockerbabe
November 17th, 2012
2:39 pm
Missy:
You are confusing the European model with the models now available here in the USA. Just because Britain or Germany has one set of policies doesn’t mean we are going in that direction. Anyway, most citizens in all parts of western Europe have better outcomes and are healthier than the Americans. We do not have socialized medicine. Even Medicare and Medicaide is not socialized medicine. Folks enrolled in both those programs can go to any MD or hospital that takes the program reimbursement structure. And, just a private insurance, the programs cover just about everything. Private insurance is not available to everyone or everywhere.
With 50+ million citizens in this country who do not have or cannot get private insurance, I would say that the private sector has not lived up to their billing. There is not a private marketplace available at this time that will cover citizens over the age of 65, citizens with pre-existing condiditons and then there are those who just flat out do not make enough to afford a private policy. If private insurance would cover everyone, we couldn’t have the issues we have now; you seem to be in denial or have been watching way too much Faux News.
Insurance exchanges are just a marketlplace were all citizens and many businesses can shop for health insurance products in a convenient place and compare one policy offering to another as well as negiotate for better pricing. It is a mall for private medical insurance carriers.
Your and many citizens like you have a gross lack of knowledge about the reality 20% of our population faces daily and your lack of willingness to fix the problems, shows your greed and stupidity.
jmc1007
November 17th, 2012
2:16 am
BTW, why is this section called “Forward”? Why would a newspaper copy the political slogan of a President and his campaign slogan? Do you not realize that “Forward” was used by many Socialist organizations during the early part of this century to further their causes
Just saying…
jmc1007
November 17th, 2012
2:08 am
The whole debate is mute. Obamacare is unconstitutional.
The Supreme Court this summer ruled Obamacare is a tax. All tax bills must originate in the House. This bill originated in the Senate by Harry Reid. There is currently a lawsuite pending and moving through the courts on this matter.
Rick
November 16th, 2012
11:59 pm
Georgia holds some of the worst statistics in the national; we have shamefully high mortality rates,, poor vaccinations rates, and very bad pollution coupled with poor asthma ratings. We are nearly at rock bottom for high school graduation rates, and the percentage of those currently insured for health care.
Governor Deal doesn’t seem to care or really understand that his political grandstanding is going to cause the death of Georgians, literally.
Good going Governor?!!! A federal program that cares about you, is world’s better than a state one that doesn’t.
An observer
November 16th, 2012
4:12 pm
Why should 50 states create 50 different exchanges? This is a tremendous duplication of effort. The federal government can create an adequate exchange. Some one save some money, please. The country is already derp in debt and digging the hole deeper.
George
November 16th, 2012
4:12 pm
Many Georgians had hoped that Obamacare would be voted down but both the electorate and the Supreme Court have spoken. Bucking the system will lead to a further deterioration in Georgia’s care system with Medicaid reimbursements stuck at a low level rather than being increased to match Medicare. Many middle class families (like the boy who died with inadequately treated acute leukemia) will still be unable to qualify for Medicaid and stuck with poor private insurance such as the managed care program discribed by the former Georgia resident. Both the exchanges and, particularly, the Medicaid expansion, should be supported because they will increase funding for adequate healthcare and begin to bring down the gigantic overhead being siphoned into the pockets of the private insurance bureaucrats and unethical practitioners. The pursuit of life, liberty, and happiness should include adequate healthcare for all.
luangtom
November 16th, 2012
3:56 pm
The implementation of Obama-care will not upgrade anyone’s quality of care. It will most likely drive the quality of care down, as most specialists will opt out of accepting low-cost government-sponsored insurance. The public hospitals and the government-run clinics will be the only ones offering care to the majority of the populace. We will soon be like Canada. Our citizens will be on waiting-lists to see specialists and our citizens will seek out-of-country care, just like our friends to the North do now. Our going with government-mandated care will also put our Canadian friends at risk. Where will they now migrate to that is so close and can offer better care? I suspect more and more people will be seeking out-of-country care now with trips medical-vacations to Thailand, Singapore and Japan. It happens now on a small scale. Just what will it be when all of Obama-care is implemented? I am fortunate to not have many years left on this planet in my mortal-life. I truly feel bad for those with long-lives ahead of them.
Missy
November 16th, 2012
3:35 pm
I plan to write the Governor and request that he DOES NOT set up an exchange in Georgia. It’s the only responsible thing to do for the residents and business owners in the state. Socialized medicine does not work like most people think it’s going to work. In the UK my boss’s mother needs expensive arthritis treaments but because she is 86 they have refused tretment saying it is too expensive. My grandmother in Germany needs an operation for an ulcer but the government panel has ruled 4 years straight that she can live without it since she is 86 years old. Our UK head office and Canada offices still have to purchase health insurance on top of the mandated health insurance because people so not want to wait two months to see a government doctor so they still end up paying for insurance premiums. I am sorry but the only thing the government does relatively well is the military and line their own political pockets in government. The government needs to get out of the way and let the free market place work.