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Senate Finance Committee Proposes Medicaid Work Requirements in Tax Cut Legislation

AI Analysis Relevanz: 8/10

Senate Finance Chairman Mike Crapo and CMS have announced new work requirements for able-bodied Medicaid recipients as part of the Working Families Tax Cuts. The policy aims to reduce federal spending and increase labor participation by requiring 80 hours of monthly community engagement for eligibility.

Why relevant? This legislation directly impacts federal healthcare spending and could significantly reduce enrollment numbers for Medicaid managed care organizations like Centene, Molina Healthcare, and UnitedHealth, while potentially influencing labor market supply.

Original Article

from the Senate Finance Committee

Working Families Tax Cuts Encourage Self-Reliance

Washington, D.C.—While Medicaid was designed to benefit specific vulnerable populations—pregnant women, Americans with disabilities, low-income children and seniors—Obamacare distorted its intended purpose by incentivizing states to enroll and prioritize healthy adults. As a result, federal Medicaid spending has more than tripled since 2008, threatening the sustainability of the program. This expansion also hurt many low-income Americans by encouraging reliance on the federal government.

The Working Families Tax Cuts strengthens and preserves Medicaid for those who need it most. Commonsense community engagement requirements call for able-bodied adult Medicaid recipients to meet the monthly work requirement through employment, education, work programs or community service for 80 hours a month. These new requirements are designed to protect taxpayers, encourage self-reliance and help lift Americans out of poverty.

“Asking Medicaid recipients who can work, study or volunteer to do so for coverage is a commonsense policy that will strengthen the program’s long-term viability and encourage personal responsibility,” said U.S. Senate Finance Chairman Mike Crapo (R-Idaho). “These long-overdue improvements will benefit truly vulnerable populations, while moving people from welfare to work and self-sufficiency.”

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) recently released regulations to guide state-by-state implementation of the requirements before they go into effect on January 1 of next year, and the public can comment on the interim final rule through the end of July. According to the rule:

What they are saying:

“The Working Families Tax Cut[s] made historic changes to the Medicaid program, and CMS is working closely with states to put those changes into action. This rule helps Americans build skills and independence through work, education, job training, or community service, creating new opportunities for themselves and their families.” – Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Administrator Dr. Mehmet Oz

“Much of the discussion surrounding work requirements focuses on coverage effects while ignoring the benefits of increased employment, earnings, and self-sufficiency. Evidence suggests that well-designed work requirements can promote economic independence.” – Paragon Health Institute President Brian Blase

Click HERE to learn more about CMS’s implementation of the Working Families Tax Cuts’ new work requirements.

Click HERE to learn more about the Finance Committee provisions in the Working Families Tax Cuts.