Header-interalia_logo
Friday 24 May 2013
  • About
    • Staff
    • Board of Trustees
    • Fellows
    • Annual Report
  • Events
    • Four Star Leadership
    • 2013 Essay Contest
    • Lecture Series
  • Publications
    • Perspective
    • Policy Papers
    • Recommended Reading
  • Research
    • Center for Economic Freedom
    • Center for Educational Freedom
    • Center for Health Freedom
    • Center for Constitutional Freedom
    • Center for Energy Freedom
    • Center for Family Prosperity
    • Other
    • Archives
  • Blog
  • Media
    • Media Inquiries
    • Featured Hot News
    • Request a Speaker
    • Videos
    • News
  • Get Involved
    • Join/Donate
    • Join Email List
    • Policy Impact Team
    • Policy to Share
    • Planned Giving
    • Internships
    • Contact
  • What Would Reagan Do?
  • RSS

BLOG

Home » Blog

Time to reform Medicaid, not expand it

By Jonathan Small, CPA · Mon, Oct 01, 2012 07:30 AM CDT
Medicaid Expansion , Medicaid Reform , Obamacare , and Health Care
 Time to reform Medicaid, not expand it

Across the nation, states are trying to cope with ever-increasing Medicaid budgets. Oklahoma is not immune to this challenge.

According to the state’s Comprehensive Annual Financial Report (CAFR), state spending on Medicaid is devouring more and more of the state budget. According to pages 164-165 of the CAFR, in FY-2005 spending on education totaled $3.534 billion and made up 30.13 percent of total state spending. State spending on health services (mostly Medicaid) totaled $3.144 billion and made up 26.81 percent of total state spending.

Fast forward to FY-2011, and spending on education totaled $4.572 billion and made up 27.47 percent of total state spending. State spending on health services (mostly Medicaid) totaled $4.851 billion and made up 29.15 percent of total state spending. So according to the CAFR:

  • Total state spending on education has grown 29.4 percent in six years, yet
  • Total state spending on health services has grown 54.3 percent in six years.

According to the CAFR, total state spending at the Oklahoma Health Care Authority (OHCA), the state’s primary Medicaid agency, is $4.413 billion. This surpasses total state spending by the state Department of Education (common education) and Higher Education combined, which is $4.270 billion.

A review of OHCA statistical information reveals that in August 2001 total Medicaid enrollment (eligibility) was 449,860. Total Medicaid enrollment for July 2012 was 797,753, an increase of 347,893 or 77.33 percent. According to the OHCA FY-2011 Annual Report, for FY-2011 there were 968,296 unduplicated members enrolled in Medicaid in Oklahoma. According to the OHCA, Medicaid covers approximately 64 percent of births in Oklahoma and at least 30 percent of the population in 30 counties.

Clearly, the state should not expand an exploding entitlement program. Rather, it should focus solely on reforming the current program, as suggested in an Oklahoman editorial last week:

Those who bemoan public school funding cuts need look no further than Medicaid to identify a major cause. In 2011, Oklahoma government expenditures on health services exceeded spending on education. Although the budget for K-12 schools was cut in recent years, the budget for the Oklahoma Health Care Authority, which administers Medicaid, increased.

The trajectory of Oklahoma's Medicaid program is unsustainable. It's grown from $333 million in state appropriations in fiscal year 2000 to $922 million this year. Policymakers are currently considering an expansion of Medicaid; it would be better to make the existing program more effective.

Fortunately, Medicaid reforms pioneered in Florida may provide a way to not only reduce costs, but also improve benefits for the poor. Officials with the Florida Foundation for Government Accountability, a conservative think tank, were in Oklahoma recently to tout this patient-centered approach to saving taxpayer money. …

The Florida reforms were championed by former Gov. Jeb Bush and took effect in five counties in 2006; they are scheduled to go statewide next year. Individuals served through the pilot program reported higher satisfaction than those in traditional Medicaid. More importantly, 64 percent of health outcomes were better for those in the reform pilot. For Florida taxpayers, the Medicaid reforms saved $118 million annually, a sum that could jump to more than $1 billion statewide.

That success shows why Oklahoma lawmakers should take a long, hard look at the Florida model as they grapple with the challenges of Medicaid, especially since these reforms have received support from both the Bush and Obama administrations. Oklahoma's Medicaid spending averages $3,171 per recipient. If our costs were comparable to Florida's reform program, Oklahoma could save more than $700 million per year (in both state and federal dollars).

Those savings could make a big difference for other needs such as schools, roads and public safety, while also giving the poor better medical care.


Possibly Related Posts

Shutterstock_58295188

Keep shutting doors on Obamacare’s Medicaid exp...

Monday, May 20, 2013

A few aspects of Obamacare are, per last summer’s U.S. Supreme Court ruling, still voluntary for the states...

Shutterstock_132479549

Obamacare’s temporary high-risk pool in Oklahom...

Thursday, May 16, 2013

Because it doesn’t fit the narrative, Obamacare proponents in Oklahoma, including many in the media, are ig...

Shutterstock_104728319

Medicaid vs. religious freedom

Tuesday, May 07, 2013

You’re perhaps aware that the Oklahoma City-based retailer Hobby Lobby is challenging the HHS anti-conscien...

Shutterstock_27277984

Oklahoma policymakers fed up with federal spend...

Wednesday, May 01, 2013

“As the battle over Medicaid expansion rages in the states,” Christina Corieri writes today in The Wall Str...

Medicaidvideo

Obamacare’s Medicaid expansion hurts the poor

Monday, April 29, 2013

Urging Oklahoma’s policymakers to show “compassion,” some leaders of the state’s Religious Left last week c...

  • Pdf16 Download PDF

Affiliate Blogs

Choice Remarks »

  • Recent
  • Popular
  •  Twitter
  • Tags
  • Oklahoma’s dynamic Medicaid discussion includes triple-amputee’s tale of hope

    Oklahoma’s dynamic Medicaid discussio...

    Thursday, May 23, 2013
  • Work to be done

    Work to be done

    Thursday, May 23, 2013
  • Tornado relief donation centers

    Tornado relief donation centers

    Tuesday, May 21, 2013
  • A question of priorities: Taxpayers or pork projects?

    A question of priorities: Taxpayers o...

    Monday, May 20, 2013
  • Why school boards often don’t represent their constituents

    Why school boards often don’t represent their c...

    Monday, November 21, 2011
  • At a glance: State ballot questions

    At a glance: State ballot questions

    Tuesday, October 09, 2012
  • Oklahoma’s Improved Economic Performance Suggests Right to Work Is Working

    Oklahoma’s Improved Economic Performance Sugges...

    Tuesday, October 04, 2011
  • Mitch Daniels, straight shooter

    Mitch Daniels, straight shooter

    Tuesday, January 29, 2013
Popular Tags
  • Spending FaxLine Report Education WWRD Budget School Choice Taxes Income Tax Higher Education Medicaid Obamacare Economics ObamaCare Special Needs education SoonerPoll Freedom Pension Reform Jobs In Case You Missed It Economy Business Health Care Dr. Fears Oklahoma

Email Signup


FEATURED LINKS

Oklahoma Pension Bomb »

National Debt Clock »

Cost of Living Index Calculator

Spend-O-Meter

How Fast Does State Government Spend Your Money? See Details »

FEATURED VIDEOS

Screen shot 2013-05-23 at 3 Play

Video24 Medical Price Honesty Benefits Patients at Surgery Center of Oklahoma

Henry Scholarships for Special-Needs Kids in Oklahoma

Video24 Henry Scholarships for Special-Needs Kids in Oklahoma

Tuesday, April 17, 2012
Historian J. Rufus Fears Talks Taxes

Video24 Historian J. Rufus Fears Talks Taxes

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Contact

Oklahoma Council of Public Affairs
1401 N. Lincoln Blvd.
Oklahoma City, OK 73104
Phone: (405) 602-1667
Fax: (855) 819-0085
Email: ocpa@ocpathink.org

Site Map

  • About
  • Staff
  • Board of Trustees
  • Fellows
  • Annual Report
  • Four Star Leadership
  • 2013 Essay Contest
  • Lecture Series
  • Perspective
  • Capitol Ideas
  • Policy Papers
  • FaxLine Report
  • Recommended Reading
  • Center for Economic Freedom
  • Center for Educational Freedom
  • Center for Health Freedom
  • Center for Constitutional Freedom
  • Center for Energy Freedom
  • Center for Family Prosperity
  • Other
  • Blog
  • Media Inquiries
  • Featured Hot News
  • Request a Speaker
  • Videos
  • Audio
  • News
  • Join/Donate
  • Join Email List
  • Policy Impact Team
  • Policy to Share
  • Planned Giving
  • Internships
  • Contact
  • Spend-O-Meter
  • Main Features
  • Cost of Living Index Calculator
  • What Would Reagan Do?

© Copyright 2013 Oklahoma Council of Public Affairs. All rights reserved