Medicaid Provider Taxes: The Gimmick that Exposes Flaws with Medicaid’S Financing

37 Pages Posted: 12 Jul 2018

Date Written: 02/16/2016

Abstract

Since a large share of state Medicaid expenditures are reimbursed by the federal government, states have a strong incentive to create techniques, such as provider taxes, to limit the amount of those expenditures paid by the state tax base. Through provider taxes, states use money raised by healthcare providers in order to extract additional federal tax dollars. States then use the federal money to increase Medicaid payments or other areas of state spending. Both the Bush and the Obama administrations proposed limiting provider taxes, and the bipartisan Bowles-Simpson Commission endorsed phasing them out. This study demonstrates that provider taxes not only shift Medicaid costs from state governments to the federal government but also increase total Medicaid expenditures. Policymakers should consider moving Medicaid to a fixed-payment structure that would incentivize states to obtain greater value from Medicaid spending and would reflect the original intent that federal Medicaid payments be based on state per capita income.

Suggested Citation

Blase, Brian, Medicaid Provider Taxes: The Gimmick that Exposes Flaws with Medicaid’S Financing (02/16/2016). MERCATUS RESEARCH, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3211658 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3211658

Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?

Paper statistics

Downloads
75
Abstract Views
599
Rank
696,930
PlumX Metrics