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243 IRET Congressional Advisory 1 (2008)

handle is hein.taxfoundation/iretcgadv0240 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 that will promote growth and efficient operation of the market economy.

September 12, 2008

Advisory No. 243

SCHIP RETURNS FOR ANOTHER VOTE

The State Children's Health Insurance Program
(SCHIP) is coming up for another vote. Two efforts
in 2007 to reauthorize and significantly expand the
program were successfully vetoed by President Bush.
(H.R. 976 was vetoed October 3, and a slightly
scaled back version, H.R. 3963, was vetoed
December 12.) Following the second veto, SCHIP
was given a simple extension at full funding of
existing coverage levels through early March of 2009
(in H.R. 3584, passed and signed into law on
December 21, 2007).    Now, the Congressional
leadership is gearing up for another attempt to pass
something like H.R. 3963.
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.
The President had proposed a 20% increase in
SCHIP, from $20 billion to $25 billion, over five
years. The Bush request was enough to fully fund a

renewal of the SCHIP program at a level that would
fully cover health cost inflation and the rising
number of children in the originally qualifying
income categories (families with income up to 200%
of poverty).
By   contrast, the  second  of the  vetoed
Congressional plans would have more than doubled
the size of the program, expanding it by $35 billion
over five years (from $25 billion to $60 billion). It
would have paid for a broad inclusion of an
additional 4 million children of middle-income
families (up to 300% of poverty, or nearly $62,000
for a family of four). To address some of the
President's concerns, it would have prohibited use of
SCHIP money for families with income above 300
percent of poverty; removed childless adults, other
than pregnant women, from the program; and would
have required a Government Accountability Office
study and subsequent efforts by the states to
determine best practices to prevent the substitution
of SCHIP for private coverage.    (Study to
determine best practices does not equal adopt and
successfully implement.)
The Congressional Budget Office    (CBO)
estimated that of every additional 100 children
enrolled  in  SCHIP  under the  Congressional
expansion proposal, between 25 and 50 of them
would be switching from private insurance. Some
would   be  switched  out of   their  parents'
employer-provided plans, and some from their
parent's individual insurance plans. This crowding
out of private coverage would shift the cost of the
insurance from private wallets to the public purse.

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