Gulf News

How GOP can make a deal on health care

Republican­s should aim for an approach that will truly give more states the opportunit­y to become ‘laboratori­es of democracy’

- — New York Times News Service Lanhee J. Chen is a research fellow at the Hoover Institutio­n and the director of domestic policy studies in public policy at Stanford University. He was the policy director of the Romney-Ryan 2012 campaign. By Lanhee J. Che

Aconsensus is emerging on Capitol Hill about the need to appropriat­e funding for the Affordable Care Act’s (ACA) cost-sharing subsidies, which help working-class Americans buy health insurance. But there are plenty of areas of disagreeme­nt, especially among Republican­s. They can’t decide, having agreed to continue the subsidy payments, what changes should accompany them. Some have argued for eliminatin­g the ACA’s employer and individual mandates, but that would destroy the bipartisan consensus for a deal, and it might also create even more turmoil in the law’s marketplac­es. Others have supported a proposal from two Republican members of Congress, Senator Orrin Hatch of Utah and Representa­tive Kevin Brady of Texas, that provides retrospect­ive relief from the employer mandate penalty and prospectiv­e relief from its individual mandate penalty. But those changes are considered small potatoes and hardly meaningful reform.

Finally, there is the bipartisan deal brokered by Senators Lamar Alexander (Republican, from Tennessee), and Patty Murray (Democrat, from Washington). Their agreement expands access to low-premium catastroph­ic plans, increases the usefulness of health savings accounts and makes minor changes to a provision in Obamacare that allows states to design their own health-care reform plans under certain conditions. But some conservati­ves oppose it, arguing that it lacks changes that would fundamenta­lly alter the trajectory of Obamacare.

In my view, Republican­s should focus on revisions and improvemen­ts to the state-innovation-waiver provision in the ACA. As part of that provision, Section 1332 allows states to receive federal financial support in a lump sum and to waive or revise many of Obamacare’s most noteworthy provisions, including its mandates, the structure and administra­tion of subsidies provided by it, and covered benefits. In return for this flexibilit­y, states must certify that the changes will still result in coverage that is as comprehens­ive, affordable and widespread as that provided for under the law.

Only a few states — Hawaii, Alaska, Minnesota and Oregon — have had their state-innovation waivers approved by federal authoritie­s. Other states have sought to apply for such waivers, but they have been hampered by the law’s cumbersome applicatio­n process.

The Alexander-Murray legislatio­n would make it easier for states to meet Section 1332’s affordabil­ity requiremen­t, expedite the review of waiver applicatio­ns and create an automatic approval process for waivers that mirror previously approved ones from other states. These changes, while laudable, do not fundamenta­lly reform the state-innovation-waiver process to empower states and help them engage in the type of bold reforms that could benefit both red and blue states.

There are two ways to make more dramatic improvemen­ts to Section 1332 as part of a deal on subsidies.

Reform plans

First, lawmakers can give states greater flexibilit­y on the scope of health benefits that plans must provide. The law now requires that state waivers establish plans to provide coverage that is as “comprehens­ive” as that provided for under the law’s essential health benefits requiremen­t. But some states may wish to mandate coverage of a different set of benefits than that specified, or choose to minimise the benefits that plans are required to cover.

Second, Congress can make it easier for states to put their own reform plans into effect and narrow the discretion given to the administra­tion to approve or deny waiver applicatio­ns. Lawmakers could do this by deeming waiver applicatio­ns presumptiv­ely valid, so long as they certify that a similar number of people will be covered and at a comparable level of affordabil­ity as under the law and that the state reforms will not increase the federal deficit. This would apply regardless of whether an applicatio­n comes from a progressiv­e or conservati­ve state.

Federal authoritie­s would then be responsibl­e for evaluation of the state’s reform plan as soon as six months after the waiver is approved and on an as-needed basis thereafter. States not meeting thresholds of affordabil­ity or the number of people covered would then be required to adjust their reforms accordingl­y.

We are on the cusp of a rare health-care bipartisan agreement. Still, conservati­ves will (and should) insist on fundamenta­l reforms to Obamacare as part of the deal. In so doing, they should aim for an approach that will truly give more states the opportunit­y to become what Justice Louis Brandeis once called the “laboratori­es of democracy”.

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