Many states will find they had no idea just what the Affordable Care Act would really cost, especially those states that are controlled by progressive socialist Democrats who, incidentally, always vote in lock-step with other progressives.
Not to worry, the taxpayer will always be there to pick up the tab, right? Oh wait, the taxpayer is now in the minority, they are tapped out. As the saying goes, 'one can only go to the well so many times before the well goes dry'.
The State of Health Care Spending
March 26, 2013
Source: Jeremy Nighohossian, Andrew J. Rettenmaier and Zijun Wang, "The State of Health Care Spending," National Center for Policy Analysis, March 26, 2013.
Why does the United States spend so much more of its national income on health care than other countries? As of 2010, the health care sector comprised 17 percent of the U.S. economy, which is a significantly greater share than all other developed countries. This has been a topic of investigation and debate within the health policy community for some time, with many concluding that the fault lies mainly in the way private sector medicine is practiced. In a new study, economists Jeremy Nighohossian, Andrew Rettenmaier and Zijun Wang of the Private Enterprise Research Center at Texas A&M University, asked a similar question about states within the United States, after finding that some states spend more than twice as much on health care as other states, as a percent of state income.
The study finds that Medicare and Medicaid exhibit much more variation than the private sector. For example, over a 40-year period:
- The variation in Medicaid spending, as a percent of state gross domestic product (GDP), was from two to three times greater than the variation in private sector spending.
- The variation in Medicare spending was from one and a half to two times greater than the variation in private sector spending.
Overall, the study found that:
- Medicare spending ranges from $11,903 per enrollee in New Jersey to $7,576 in Arizona.
- Medicaid spending ranges from $11,569 per enrollee in Alaska to $4,569 in California.
- While 43 percent of beneficiaries are in Medicare Advantage plans (mainly managed care) in Minnesota, the figure is less than 10 percent in Alaska, Delaware, Vermont, Wyoming and New Hampshire.
- While South Carolina and Tennessee have 100 percent of their Medicaid enrollees in managed care programs; Alaska, New Hampshire and Wyoming have no Medicaid managed care enrollment.
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