Medicaid At 50: Remarkable Growth Fueled By Unexpected Politics.

Health Aff (Millwood)

Michael S. Sparer is a professor and chair of the Department of Health Policy and Management at the Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, in New York City.

Published: July 2015

Medicaid has grown exponentially since the mid-1980s, during both conservative Republican and liberal Democratic administrations. How has this happened? The answer is rooted in three political variables: interest groups, political culture, and American federalism. First, interest-group support (from hospitals, nursing homes, and insurers) is more influential than the fragmented group opposition (from underpaid office-based physicians). Second, Medicaid provides a partial counterweight to conservative charges of a federal health care takeover because of the states' roles in administering the program. Third, Medicaid's intergovernmental fiscal partnership creates financial incentives for state and federal officials to expand enrollment-expansions that these policy makers often favor, given the program's increasingly important role in the nation's health care system. This institutional dynamic is here called catalytic federalism.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1377/hlthaff.2015.0083DOI Listing

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