John Hood: Put work requirements on Medicaid
Published 4:13 pm Wednesday, January 17, 2018
RALEIGH — If government gives you a cash handout or a “free” service and you are capable of working, studying, or providing service to the community in exchange, should you be obligated to do so?
Most conservatives say yes. Most progressives say no. Most Americans agree with the conservatives on this
A couple of years ago, the administration of former Gov. Pat McCrory instituted a requirement that recipients of the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program — or SNAP, what used to be called food stamps — had to comply with a work requirement if they were able-bodied and didn’t have dependent children.
McCrory and the General Assembly also fashioned a reform plan to introduce more managed care within the state’s Medicaid program. One element of the resulting Medicaid waiver submitted to the federal government was a proposed work requirement for recipients whose health conditions and caregiving responsibilities would allow it.
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services has just ruled that states can institute Medicaid work requirements.
There is a debate about the efficacy of work mandates. Do they cost more to administer than they save? How many welfare recipients are capable of working? What if jobs are hard to find? What other activities — job training, for example, or volunteering — ought to satisfy the requirement?
If the government is to be in the public-assistance business, the strongest case for support involves the aged, the infirm, the disabled and orphaned children. Relatives ought to be primary caregivers. But in cases where family resources and private philanthropy are insufficient, most North Carolinians support not just a temporary safety net but long-term public assistance.
For able-bodied people who don’t fit these categories, most people see government’s proper role as much more limited. Whatever temporary assistance might be rendered, they should be moved as rapidly as possible into work, self-sufficiency and self-respect. A combination of time limits and work requirements is necessary to combat welfare dependency, which saps initiative, unravels families and creates multi-generational cycles of poverty.
If work-or-service requirements for able-bodied Medicaid recipients are too hard to define or costly to administer, then that becomes a strong argument not to allow such recipients on Medicaid in the first place — at least not in a free society where government is supposed to be minimized and personal responsibility is supposed to be the default.
Medicaid is the primary welfare program in the United States. It is far larger and more expensive than cash assistance, SNAP or public housing. It is one of the fastest-growing expenses in federal and state budgets. If work requirements don’t apply to Medicaid, then the full potential of welfare reform will never be realized.
Because North Carolina has not liberalized its eligibility standards under the Affordable Care Act, we don’t have very many Medicaid recipients who’d be subject to work requirements. Still, North Carolina Democrats and progressive activists desperately want Medicaid expansion to happen.
It would be a prudent decision if they dropped their opposition to work requirements and cooperated with Republicans in devising some sensible rules. That would undercut one of the main arguments conservatives have used, so far successfully, to rebut the special-interest pressure to expand Medicaid.
That’s what I think the Left should do. That’s not what I think the Left will do.
John Hood is chairman of the John Locke Foundation.