Catastrophic cuts are in the offing for Medicaid, the nation’s largest single source of health coverage, serving primarily low-income Americans. But catastrophe is not inevitable.
For some time, Republican lawmakers and allies in conservative think tanks have formulated plans to shrink Medicaid’s health care coverage for the 72 million people it benefits: low-income families, adults with disabilities and low-income seniors needing long-term care. As Donald Trump and his Republican allies in the House and Senate get ready to assume power in January, they’re also getting ready to turn these plans into policy.
Through Medicaid, individuals and families gain access to life-saving medications, critical care for acute diseases, and care for chronic conditions like diabetes, cardiovascular disease, obesity and liver disease. Medicaid funds two out of every five pregnancies in the U.S., and is the nation’s largest payer for behavioral health services and long-term care.
But proposals floated this year by House Republicans and by analysts working for the Heritage Foundation’s Project 2025 would severely underfund or cut these services entirely for many people. While the federal government currently provides 90% of matching federal-state funding to ensure that all eligible individuals are covered (according to a provision of the Affordable Care Act), the House Republicans’ plan and the Project 2025 proposals would reduce the federal share significantly, transferring costs to the states and to individuals.
And, if other Republican or Project 2025 proposals are adopted to fund Medicaid through block grants to states or to cap allocations to individuals, people covered by the program would experience higher out-of-pocket costs, reduced benefits or loss of benefits entirely — leading to significantly increased rates of medical debt and bankruptcy.