Working Paper: NBER ID: w28670
Authors: Jeffrey Clemens; Benedic N. Ippolito; Stan Veuger
Abstract: We analyze the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on state and local government finances, with an emphasis on health spending needs and the role of the Medicaid program. We arrive at three conclusions. First, we find that nationwide, and over the entirety of the federal budget window, the enhanced federal matching funds are of roughly the same magnitude as expected increases in state Medicaid costs. There is a difference in timing, however, as projected relief funds are more concentrated in the near term than projected spending needs. Second, we show that there is substantial variation in states’ exposure to increases in Medicaid program costs. Third, we evaluate the extent to which federal aid has been targeted at states with large increases in Medicaid costs. We show that the enhanced Medicaid matching funds are quite weakly correlated with variations in states’ cost increases. In contrast, the state aid formula in the American Recovery Plan Act appears, to at least a moderate degree, to direct dollars toward states with large increases in their Medicaid enrollments.
Keywords: Medicaid; COVID-19; Fiscal Federalism
JEL Codes: H72; H75; H77
Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.
Cause | Effect |
---|---|
Enhanced federal matching funds (H77) | Expected increases in state Medicaid costs (I18) |
State-specific factors (H73) | Increases in Medicaid expenditure (H51) |
Federal aid targeting (F35) | Effectiveness in addressing large increases in Medicaid costs (I18) |