Government isn't very business-like. That's especially true when
it comes to accountability. If a private business discovered it was
being defrauded to the tune of billions of dollars every year, it
would find out exactly where that money was going -- and plug the
holes.
But in government, waste is often business as usual. Consider
Medicaid.
The state of New York spends roughly $44 billion on that program.
According to a New York Times report last year, at least 10 percent
of that was simply wasted on fraudulent claims. That's $4.4
billion.
It gets worse. James Mehmet, the former chief investigator of
Medicaid abuse in New York City, told the paper, "About 40 percent
of all claims are questionable." That's a shocking $18 billion, big
money by any measure.
There's a reason governments feel free to waste so much. The money
they're spending isn't really theirs, it's ours. Plus, each state
runs its own Medicaid program, with the federal government
reimbursing the states for an average of 57 percent of what the
program costs. So states such as New York have an incentive to
over-report their spending, since out-of-state taxpayers are
chipping in more than 40 percent of everything they spend.
Medicaid is supposed to help 44 million low-income Americans get
medical care. But if lawmakers and voters really want it to help
people, they should ask a fundamental question: Is it
responsible?
It's difficult to imagine a system more open to fraud and abuse
than the current one. If we want to make sure Medicaid meets the
real health needs of poor Americans -- now and in the future --
federal and state policymakers should work together to fix
Medicaid.
A sensible first step would involve focusing the program on
patients, not providers.
The current system pays doctors set fees for particular services.
It would be better to give beneficiaries control of this money and
allow them to shop around for medical care. Doing so would save
money, limit fraud and ensure that every patient was getting the
care needed.
At the same time, policymakers should end Medicaid's
one-size-fits-all approach to health care. Loosening up federal
guidelines would allow doctors more freedom to treat each patient
-- whether a retiree with a heart condition or a child from a
foster home -- as an individual with specific needs.
Washington also should stop micromanaging which people must be in
the program. Outdated federal rules slot people into "mandatory" or
"optional" categories, and states have little real input. To
promote effective reform, Washington should allow states to
determine who needs to be on Medicaid and who doesn't.
In addition, the federal government must get spending under
control.
Too many states have rigged the system because, like New York,
they think they're getting something for nothing. But whether a tax
dollar comes from Albany or Washington, it's still a tax dollar.
It's time to close the loopholes that encourage out-of-control
spending.
And Congress needs to crack down on the type of private fraud that
happens when middle-class Americans shelter their assets in order
to qualify for long-term care services (such as nursing home care)
under Medicaid. Lawmakers should differentiate between medical
services and welfare services.
Meanwhile, states should chip in by encouraging patients to buy
private insurance coverage. This would move many families off
direct assistance and allow them the same health-care choices most
working Americans enjoy.
Medicaid should be a safety net for the needy, not a hammock for
the greedy. And governments should spend tax dollars sparingly and
responsibly. Medicaid has grown out of control and cannot survive
in its present form. If lawmakers want to bring fiscal sanity back,
fixing Medicaid is a critical first step.
Edwin
Feulner is president of The Heritage Foundation
(heritage.org), a Washington-based public policy research institute
and co-author of the new book Getting
America Right.
First Appeared in the Knight-Ridder Tribune wire