Given the Supreme Court opinion upholding PPACA and
the re-election of President Obama, the assumption that PPACA, his single major
accomplishment from his first term, would face little resistance to its full-implementation
was wrong from the beginning.
Neither the Supreme Court decision nor President
Obama’s re-election guarantees that PPACA will ever be implemented. In fact,
there are lawsuits against PPACA already in federal court, including a case
filed by the state of Oklahoma arguing that the federal government does not
have authority to force employers into the program if the state has not set up
an exchange.
Some Democrat legislators have accused Bentley of
violating federal law but that couldn’t be more wrong.
States are under no obligation to set up health
exchanges. The law clearly makes it optional for states to establish their own
exchanges or to allow the federal government to establish one. The problem with
that is while the law allows the federal government to set up exchanges, as
pointed out above, it does not provide for the federal government to administer
premium-assistance tax credits nor impose fines on the individuals and
businesses that do not participate.
PPACA, as passed by Congress and signed into law by
President Obama, clearly restricts the administration of the premium-assistance
tax credits to the states. Both the Department of Health and Human Services and
the IRS dispute this but their arguments are parsed in terms of the intent of
the law instead of what the law clearly states. This dispute will most likely
be settled in federal court, possibly at the Supreme Court level, but as the
law now stands, the federal government has no authority to create this new
entitlement or impose taxes on those who refuse to participate. This function
is clearly reserved only to state-run exchanges.
Some proponents of the law also argue that if the
state doesn’t act, the federal government will act in its place to run the
exchange and the state will lose control. The problem with that argument is
that even if a state sets up the exchange, the real control is with the federal
government. The state really does not control them.
Not only would states have no real control, they
would foot the bill for administrative costs. In Alabama, that could run from
$30 to $50 million per year. If states do not set up exchanges the
administrative costs shift entirely to the federal government. That becomes a
huge problem because funding for the federal exchanges must be authorized by
Congress. Even if the courts declared that the federal government has the
authority to impose the taxes and administer the premium-assistance program as
the IRS claims, Congress would still have to pass legislation appropriating the
funds.
With Republican governors saying “no” to the
exchanges and with the Republicans still firmly in control of the House, that
is not likely to happen.
Governor Bentley is making the right decision not to
set up the health exchanges and not to expand Medicaid. He is also advocating
the right approach to health care reform. Bentley and other Republican
governors are pushing reforms that will allow people more freedom in their
choices regarding health insurance. He specifically cited the state of Utah
model that is “…a free-market exchange that allows more choice and has all
these different plans and it’s managed by the states, not the federal
government.”
The objective of the states that are refusing to set
up exchanges is to make PPACA impossible to implement and to bring about new
health reforms that provide affordable health care coverage, give people more
choices, respect the rights of individuals, and that don’t bankrupt states or
the federal government. According to some estimates, repealing PPACA and replacing
it with state-focused reforms as suggested by Governor Bentley and other
Republican governors would save Alabama $300-$500 million over 10 years and
reduce the federal deficit by at least $2 trillion.
In that regard, Governor Bentley and his fellow governors
are making the right decision for their state and they are making the right
decision for the country.
About the author: Gary Palmer is president of the
Alabama Policy Institute, a non-partisan, non-profit research and education
organization dedicated to the preservation of free markets, limited government
and strong families, which are indispensable to a prosperous society.
This article was published by the Alabama Policy
Institute.
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