Ranking the Reforms at Risk in a Deficit Deal

Ranking the Reforms at Risk in a Deficit Deal

As the nation's leaders lurch toward a deal to cut the deficit, lawmakers have floated a range of possible health care cuts. Here's a list of potential programs and reform initiatives that are most at risk in the current negotiations.

It’s tough to know who’s more perplexed these days — Americans confused by the debt ceiling crisis, or the rest of the world totally mystified by our political game of chicken.

As the Aug. 2 deadline for either raising the nation’s debt limit or slicing spending inches ever closer, at least one prominent satirist is counting down to “armadebton.” Other observers termed President Obama and House Speaker John Boehner’s dueling speeches on Monday “the State of Disunion.”

Gallows humor aside, we’re in a state of flux.

Even professional lobbyists admit they’re straining to stay informed. “I go to bed, and I wake up, and everything’s changed,” the CEO of one advocacy group told the Washington Post.

There have been at least six deficit-reduction plans in play across the past week. As of California Healthline press time on Wednesday, Boehner’s plan had emerged as a shaky candidate for a deal, amid wavering Republican support and last-minute rewrites; Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid’s alternate proposal lurks as a fall-back measure.

Despite the public rhetoric, the Boehner and Reid plans have much in common: Both would address the deficit in a two-step process, focusing on cuts to discretionary spending now and leaving harder decisions like Medicare reforms to a later date. Another option that could resurface is a bipartisan Senate framework that lets Obama incrementally raise the debt limit by $1.5 trillion.

Framing the discussions are the bruising health care battles of the past two years; neither political party wants to be tagged for touching politically sensitive entitlements, if possible. Meanwhile, some Republicans continue to hope the deficit negotiations will do what their earlier attempts couldn’t: drastically weaken last year’s health law.

Here’s one attempt to decode the debate and figure out what a deficit-reduction deal — any deal — would mean for the health care sector and the Affordable Care Act, starting with the programs and initiatives that are most at risk.

Prevention Funds: High Risk

Preventive care’s long-term, often difficult-to-prove benefits make it persistently tough for lawmakers to fund. It may get harder as legislators search for immediate savings in coming days.

The health law’s $18 billion prevention program already has survived Republican accusations that it’s a “slush fund” for HHS and a House GOP effort to repeal it. However, the fund seems unlikely to make it out of the deficit talks untouched. There’s a growing expectation that the program’s funding will be cut, maybe in half, and advocates are now honing their strategies to preserve the rest.

One approach: Stressing that the program has clear health and cost benefits, like curbing falls for seniors or improving diabetes management, and that doing away with the fund would lead to real consequences. Writing in The Hill this week about the nation’s struggle with obesity, the Arkansas surgeon general warned that politicians seeking a “quick fix” by cutting the prevention fund would set in motion a “long-term nightmare” as obesity-related costs and complications only spiral higher.

Medicaid Eligibility and Funding Expansions: High Risk

Advocates have been girding for this battle for months. Their moment seems to have finally arrived.

Conservatives and some Democrats have attempted to roll back the health law’s Medicaid expansion, citing concern that the law grows the nation’s entitlement programs at a tenuous time. Under ACA, Medicaid would stretch to cover more than 16 million uninsured Americans through expanded eligibility requirements and federal support.

Before their negotiations ended acrimoniously last week, Obama and Boehner had settled on making some Medicaid cuts, although the scope and level were still up for debate. Democrats have a strong incentive to preserve the ACA’s Medicaid expansion, as it’s the law’s key vehicle toward covering the nation’s uninsured, but political observers say that the White House could compromise by trimming subsidies or scaling back the expansion, perhaps losing several million Americans from the program in the process.

In addition, the Obama administration appeared willing to standardize federal matching funds for Medicaid, under an outline that was leaked several weeks ago. This new blended rate would likely cut federal spending — perhaps saving $100 billion across a decade — but also pass more costs along to states and care providers, the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities noted.

Meanwhile, both Democrats and Republicans have introduced legislation to do away with a “glitch” that would have allowed middle-income early retirees to qualify for Medicaid. The Congressional Budget Office forecast that the measures would save $13 billion over the first 10 years and reduce the Medicaid expansion by fewer than one million Americans. The bipartisan support and CBO score make it more likely that the measure would be included in any deficit-reduction plan.

CLASS Act: Moderate Risk

The CLASS Act, a piece of last year’s health reform law that establishes a long-term disability insurance program, would seem to appeal across party lines. It’s voluntary and promotes personal independence, which reflects Republican principles. It has powerful supporters in the advocacy community and was a pet program of the late Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.), establishing its Democratic bona fides. As a bonus, CBO scored it as cutting the deficit by $83 billion across a decade. What’s not to like?

For starters, conservatives aren’t thrilled by the program’s lack of long-term funding details. The legislation that set up CLASS didn’t specify how HHS would ultimately sustain the program; instead, the agency has to devise potential benefit plans and a level of premiums that are actuarially sound across the next 75 years. Others say CLASS could be subject to adverse selection, as its voluntary nature may lead to only the sickest patients being enrolled.

Still, eyebrows were raised when the Senate’s bipartisan Gang of Six positioned the repeal of CLASS as a key component of its deficit deal plan, signaling that the program could be a bargaining chip in deficit talks.

Yet some are optimistic that CLASS will survive upcoming deficit cuts. Howard Bedlin, vice president for public policy and advocacy at the National Council on Aging, told California Healthline that CBO’s favorable scoring of CLASS “keeps it in the game.” At this stage in deficit talks, “where else are you going to find $83 billion” in savings, he added.

Bedlin also pointed to a NCOA brief on the “top 10 reasons why conservatives should love the CLASS program,” suggesting that Republicans would find the program more palatable upon closer review.

Individual Mandate: Low Risk

Another conservative stalking horse has been the health law’s controversial individual mandate. In fact, White House officials say last week’s talks between Boehner and Obama broke down in part because Republicans began pushing to strike the mandate. One potential, mutually painful trigger reportedly under discussion would have involved a tax hike on wealthy Americans and the mandate’s repeal if the sides could not agree to tax reform in 2012.

However, the president and Democrats have fought so hard to preserve the mandate — the crucial lever to driving the health law’s coverage expansion — that it is unlikely they would abandon it now. “There’s no way that Obama would put his biggest accomplishment at risk, so I can’t see this deal actually happening,” conservative writer Philip Klein writes in the Washington Examiner. More likely, the greater threat to the mandate is the legal effort challenging its constitutionality.

Looking Ahead

Policy experts stress that many other programs and elements of health reform also are on the table, including plans to pare down Medigap coverage and efforts to rework Medicare’s physician payment formula.

Most of these proposals are being hotly contested. For example, some have suggested making changes to hold down Medicare Part D’s costs by using Medicaid-style rebates. However, the American Action Forum’s Douglas Holtz-Eakin and Michael Ramlet warn that imposing mandatory prescription drug rebates would only raise senior premiums and “put the popular program at risk.”

Should the Boehner or Reid bill move forward, the two-stage deficit cuts ensure months of additional battling over the government’s health care programs, and California Healthline will continue to track the latest developments. In the meantime, here’s a scan of other reform-related news from around the nation.

Administration Actions

Challenges to Reform

Effects on Families

Eye on the Courts

On the Hill

Spotlight on ACOs

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