Medicaid: Matching Formula's Performance and Potential Modifications
(Testimony, 07/27/95, GAO/T-HEHS-95-226).
When the Medicaid program was established in 1965, a matching formula
was developed to narrow differences likely to arise among Medicaid
programs in wealthier and poorer states. By giving poorer state a
higher federal match, it was believed that disparities would be reduced
across states in (1) population groups and services covered in each
state program and (2) the tax burden imposed by the financing of
Medicaid relative to the size of the state's financial resources. GAO
testified that the matching formula, with its reliance on per capita
income as a measure of state wealth, has not significantly reduced wide
differences in states' Medicaid programs or the tax burdens to support
them. Large disparities persist in coverage of population groups and
types of services as well as in the burdens that state taxpayers bear in
financing state programs. Modifying the formula could enhance the
ability of federal payments to narrow program disparities.
--------------------------- Indexing Terms -----------------------------
REPORTNUM: T-HEHS-95-226
TITLE: Medicaid: Matching Formula's Performance and Potential
Modifications
DATE: 07/27/95
SUBJECT: Medicaid programs
State-administered programs
Disadvantaged persons
Health care cost control
Federal/state relations
Federal aid to states
Cost sharing (finance)
Health care services
Formula grants
Taxpayers
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