Congressional leaders are looking to make big reductions to federal spending to pay for President Trump’s priorities, and they’ve
singled out Medicaid
Trump said last month that he would
not make cuts
Conservative Medicaid experts noted that some of the cuts
would likely overlap
Medicaid provides health insurance to
80 million
Many conservatives and libertarians have long believed that a smaller Medicaid program that covers fewer people would be a better Medicaid program.
“Medicaid is not working for Americans,” said Robert F. Kennedy Jr. last week at his
confirmation hearings
“We’re spending
$900 billion
The health podcast Tradeoffs interviewed 13 experts who collectively have decades of experience working on Medicaid for conservative think tanks, Republican presidents, members of Congress or state Medicaid programs. They did not agree on everything, but a few themes emerged that illustrate why many Republicans want to shrink the program.
Questioning whether Medicaid makes people healthier
Some conservatives cite the highly regarded
Oregon Medicaid Experiment
“Every member of Congress should be asking questions on both sides of the aisle about, hey, we’re spending hundreds of billions of dollars [on Medicaid]. What are we getting for it?” said
Josh Archambault
Archambault and others place a lot of value on the Oregon experiment because it’s the only randomized study (the gold standard in research) of the impacts of Medicaid.
In 2008, Oregon used a lottery to expand its Medicaid program, which allowed researchers to compare outcomes after two years for people who received Medicaid and those who didn’t.
They
found
“I think that should raise some very big questions in our mind about the effectiveness of Medicaid,” Archambault said.
Many Medicaid experts — including several who served as state Medicaid directors under Republican governors — told Tradeoffs Medicaid is effective, pointing to the
many studies
“Medicaid can help people be healthier,” said Kevin Bagley, who ran Nebraska’s Medicaid program from 2020 to 2023. “A lot of kids especially have better access to care and better health outcomes as a result [of being on Medicaid].”
'It’s almost free money’ for states
The most common concern conservative experts brought up was that states have a strong financial incentive to grow their Medicaid programs.
States and the federal government
share
Tom Scully, who ran the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services for President George W. Bush, said it’s too easy for states to draw down federal dollars.
“It’s almost free money for the states, and there’s no accountability for it,” he said.
Scully compared the dynamic to an allowance: If you give your kid $20 a week, they’re going to be more thoughtful about spending it than if you give them your credit card.
In particular, Scully and other conservatives take issue with what’s known as a
provider tax
Under this provision, for example, if a state wants to increase Medicaid spending by $1 million, it could assess a $500,000 tax on hospitals, and then spend that money on Medicaid services. The federal government would, in response, cut a $500,000 check to match.
Critics like Scully deride provider taxes as
“money laundering”
These arrangements are legal, and many experts note they are
particularly useful
Some Medicaid recipients could get health insurance elsewhere
Several conservative Medicaid experts shared the belief that some people on Medicaid could afford private insurance.
“Medicaid is forcing taxpayers to pay for things that people could provide for themselves,” said Cannon, from the libertarian Cato Institute.
Health economists generally agree that some people on Medicaid could get coverage through their employer or via the Obamacare exchanges, but how many is
less clear
Some experts worry that efforts to remove people with other coverage options from the program would inevitably lead to many people without other insurance choices also losing coverage and ending up uninsured.
Most conservative reforms would cut federal Medicaid funding
Republicans have floated
numerous
“Ultimately, you have to cap the amount of federal funding that states are able to get,” said Chris Pope, a senior fellow at the conservative Manhattan Institute.
One option would be for Washington to pay states less to cover the
21 million people
A
proposal
The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office
estimated
A few other ideas conservatives mentioned to Tradeoffs: requiring some people to
work
Cutting Medicaid spending comes with tradeoffs
Many conservatives agree that shrinking federal spending on Medicaid will have two major benefits. One is cost savings — less Medicaid spending could free up cash to spend on other priorities like schools, public safety or curbing the national debt.
Liz Matney, who ran Iowa’s Medicaid program from 2021 to 2024, also argues that sending states less money would encourage them to narrow their focus to the original Medicaid population.
“Medicaid’s original purpose was to provide medical services to individuals with disabilities and low-income families,” Matney said. “It’s a challenge for states to focus on making solid improvements in these areas when their focus is continuously shifted to shinier priorities.”
Many
studies
Several former state Medicaid directors from Republican-led states said they would welcome the increased flexibility to run their programs as they see fit — a flexibility that is often a part of proposals that would reduce federal Medicaid spending. But several are also concerned about the potential health and financial consequences to patients if Washington imposes severe cuts and millions of people lose their Medicaid coverage.
Barbara Roshon Sears, who ran Ohio’s Medicaid program from 2016 to 2018, said state Medicaid programs and hospitals are incredibly reliant on federal funding. She said she worries especially about older Americans, who rely on Medicaid to pay for things Medicare doesn’t like nursing home care, and people with disabilities. These two groups account for
most of Medicaid spending
“Those are the populations that get hit if I run out of [federal] dollars,” Sears said.
Brian Blase, a former top health policy advisor to President Trump and current president of the Paragon Health Institute, said he believes most coverage losses from the Republican proposals would hit low-income adults who were added to the program by the Obamacare expansion. He sees few downsides to this group losing Medicaid.
Blase believes some would find coverage through their work or via the Obamacare exchanges. For those who would end up uninsured, he refers back to the Oregon experiment and questions
how much of a difference
“States will have to make decisions. States will have to engage in tradeoffs,” he said. “We want states to have programs that provide value.”
Can Republicans get any of these cuts passed?
Even many Republicans eager to cut Medicaid believe it will be difficult to make sizable changes to the program in 2025, despite full control of Congress and the White House.
Democrats are expected to oppose any Medicaid reductions, and hospitals have historically done the same because Medicaid payments make up
one-fifth of hospital revenue
“It’s very easy to propose these fixes. It is very hard to get them passed,” said Tom Scully, whose efforts to reform Medicaid date back 35 years.
Case in point, Republicans
failed to pass
The Trump administration, on its own, could encourage states to add work requirements or turn their federal subsidies into block grants. Any
executive action
“Something should have been done to fix this 40 years ago. And 30 years ago and 20 years ago and 10 years ago,” Scully said. “But it’s never happened because the local and state politics are too brutal, and it’s too complicated — people back off and surrender.”
Ryan Levi is a reporter and producer for
Tradeoffs
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