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226 IRET Congressional Advisory 1 (2007)

handle is hein.taxfoundation/iretcgadv0223 and id is 1 raw text is: INSTITUTE FOR RESEARCH ON THE ECONOMICS OF TAXATION
IRET is a non-profit 501 (c)(3) economic policy research and educational organization devoted to informing
the public about policies thait will promote growth and efficient operation of the market economy.

August 1, 2007

Advisory No. 226

SCHIP REAUTHORIZATION: RENEW OR EXPAND?

The State Children's Health Insurance Program
(SCHIP) requires Congressional reauthorization by
the end of September. Will it be renewed in its
current form, or expanded to cover a much larger
population?
Reauthorization, expansion, two different thinms
SCHIP is a popular program with the public and
the Congress. No one is talking about eliminating it,
or denying coverage assistance for low income
children. However, one side in the SCHIP debate
would reauthorize SCHIP with a moderate increase
in its funding to reach more of the existing eligible
population of low income children. The other side
supports a large expansion of the program to bring
children of higher income families under its
umbrella, and extend eligibility to young adults.
Oriiinal intent
SCHIP was originally designed to provide
insurance for children in families with incomes up to
twice the poverty level. The targeted families had
income too high to qualify for Medicaid, but not
high enough to make insurance readily affordable.
Many states requested and were granted waivers
to expand coverage to children in families with
incomes up to 300 percent or 350 percent of poverty.
Some states included large numbers of adults in their
programs. These states have covered additional
populations even though they have not fully enrolled
the children in the original target group of poorer

families.  A  number of states overspent their
allotments due to their more generous eligibility
rules, and have received matching funds from
Congress to help cover the over-runs.
Expansion of SCHIP in the Senate and House
bills
A simple extension of SCHIP would cost about
$5 billion a year, or about $25 billion over five years
in the baseline outlays. The Administration has
recommended an increase to a bit over $30 billion.
The Senate Finance Committee SCHIP bill
would increase coverage to families with incomes up
to three times the poverty level.  The SCHIP
expansion provisions of the bill would require an
increase in outlays beyond the baseline of $28.1
billion over five years, and $26.5 billion over ten
years. The ten year increase is less than the five
year  increase  because  the   bill  assumes,
unrealistically, that the expanded eligibility will
sunset at the end of the five years.  Counting
Medicaid interactions, the additional cost would be
$32.8 billion over five years, and $64.9 billion over
ten years.
The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) scores
the Senate bill as being fully funded over the ten
year budget window (2008-2017), but that budget
neutrality is achieved by a gimmick in the bill. The
tobacco tax increase that is the main source of
funding for the bill (see below) is assumed to be
permanent, but the expanded income limits on

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