Congress's mad dash to expand the State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) fails to correct the serious flaws buried in last year's SCHIP bill.
The new SCHIP bill would not only make comprehensive health care reform more difficult; it would also directly undercut President Obama's promise to end special interest earmarks. Once Congress creates a new government benefit, it would be very difficult to reverse course. In this case, Congress would be taking more healthy lives out of the private health insurance pool, thus reducing private coverage, increasing taxpayer burdens, and undercutting the ability of the private sector to maintain or expand coverage later.
Misleading Numbers
The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) analysis of the proposed SCHIP expansion shows that enrollment would be far short of the stated purpose of the legislation to "enroll all six million uninsured children who are eligible, but not enrolled, for coverage today."[1] The CBO shows that the reduction of the uninsured of currently eligible individuals counting both Medicaid and SCHIP would be only 3.4 million individuals.[2] After subtracting out adults, the number of currently eligible children actually gaining coverage would be about 3.1 million. The first thing the Senate should do is use accurate and transparent numbers in the national debate.
10 Key Changes
Congress must make 10 important changes to the legislation.
- Change #1: Limit Income Eligibility to "Targeted Low-Income
Children." SCHIP was created for children whose family income
was above Medicaid but not sufficient to be able to afford
insurance. Congress defined a targeted low-income child as living
in a family with income at or below 200 percent of the federal
poverty level, or 50 percentage points above Medicaid
eligibility at the time of enactment. Strangely, the legislation
does not change the definition of a targeted-low income child, but
it does provide federal funds for children above the income
threshold. This leads to confusion as to who is eligible for SCHIP.
H.R. 2, the "Children's Health Insurance Program Reauthorization
Act of 2009" (CHIPRA), does not cap eligibility, so it is
possible that a state can make children in families at any
income level eligible for assistance.
- Change #2: Limit the Children's Program to Children.
Under Section 112 of CHIPRA, adults will continue to be eligible
for SCHIP, and the states that operate demonstration projects to
provide coverage to them will continue to receive the enhanced
match rate through fiscal year 2012. Section 112 actually restores
demonstration projects that have expired, giving additional federal
dollars to Oregon, Rhode Island, and Wisconsin for adults that were
moved to Medicaid. New Jersey and Michigan would have also lost the
enhanced match this month and are now protected. The individuals in
these demonstrations did not lose eligibility; they were to receive
continued coverage through Medicaid. The issue is what match rate
will be paid to the states. Congress should end the enhanced match
rate upon enactment.
- Change #3: Increase Health Insurance Coverage, Not
Government Dependency. When government programs are expanded,
people lose private coverage. When this "crowd out" effect occurs,
insurance coverage is not expanded; taxpayer dollars are simply
substituted for private dollars. This is even more likely to occur
at higher income levels where families are more likely to have
access to private coverage through employers. The House bill has
failed again to apply meaningful protections against crowd out. CBO
estimates that the reauthorization legislation will result in the
reduction in private coverage of 2.3 million individuals.[3] At a
minimum, Congress should require the secretary of health and human
services to certify that 95 percent of low-income children in a
state have insurance before allowing a state to raise eligibility
to higher income children. Congress should impose stiff
requirements to ensure that poor children are served first.
- Change #4: Respect Parental Authority, Religious Liberty,
and the Integrity of the Family Unit. SCHIP legislation should
not become an open-ended grant of power for bureaucracy to define
and limit parental authority and resolve sensitive issues that
should be left to families. Pro-family groups may find that a
change in Administrations mean a change in how provisions of SCHIP
may be interpreted. Congress should modify these provisions to
prohibit unwanted or unintended government intrusions into parental
authority and family autonomy.
- Change #5: Make Sure Immigration Does Not Become a Path to
Dependency. The legislation pushes the hot button issue of
immigration by extending benefits to immigrants. For more than 10
years since the enactment of welfare reform, federal law has
prohibited even legal immigrants from being eligible for Medicaid
and SCHIP for the first five years upon entering the United States.
A legal immigrant is brought into the country by a sponsor and the
sponsor has agreed to provide for the needs of the individual. That
responsibility should not be shifted to taxpayers, and the
provision should be deleted.
- Change #6: End the Budget Gimmicks. The SCHIP
legislation repeats the budgetary sleight of hand from last year in
which the appropriation for SCHIP is reduced by $10 billion in
order to avoid regular congressional spending rules. If it turned
out to be true, millions of children on SCHIP would be thrown off
the program. This is not responsible legislating and must be
fixed.
- Change #7: Be Fair to Taxpayers. The legislation is
funded principally through a tax on tobacco. Any tax in an economic
downturn is inadvisable, and this particular type of tax falls
disproportionately on low-income individuals. An increase in the
federal tax will also decrease state revenues. Congress should
offset the increase in SCHIP and Medicaid with spending
reductions.
- Change #8: Root Out Special interest Earmarks. The
legislation flatly contradicts presidential and congressional
pledges to eliminate earmarks. Individual states and providers will
receive special treatment through a variety of provisions. If the
new Congress and Administration are serious about change and
delivering on promises to end earmarks for special interests, such
provisions should not be included.
- Change #9: Maintain Program Integrity. Medicaid and
SCHIP will be thrown wide open to abuse through the expansion of
presumptive eligibility, Express Lane eligibility, and the
Performance Bonus. Such policies are incompatible with both fiscal
responsibility and program integrity. Giving control of determining
eligibility to providers who will have incentives to game the
system is a serious abdication of responsibility.
- Change #10: Stand Up for Fiscal Integrity. H.R. 2 unnecessarily drives up the cost of providing coverage to low-income children. The amount of allotments greatly exceeds actual demand by states. The Performance Bonus, for example, would pay states a super-enhanced match rate for Medicaid children who are already eligible for the program. Eligibility expansions backed by a new Contingency Fund would undermine the integrity of allotments and will reward states for overspending. With the assurance of more federal dollars, states will pursue unsound policies regarding eligibility levels, crowd out, and cost sharing. The federal taxpayer would be on the hook for any decision the state makes. Weakening citizenship documentation requirements would cost $1.9 billion, and changes would be made without solid evidence that citizens have been denied Medicaid eligibility. Congress should consider rational and responsible alternatives that would achieve better results at a lower cost to the taxpayers.
The Senate can do much better than the House. It is time for change.
Dennis G. Smith is Senior Fellow in the Center for Health Policy Studies at The Heritage Foundation.