Medicaid and State Financing: Key Indicators to Watch Through Pandemic and Recovery

The health and economic effects of the pandemic have significant implications for Medicaid.  Medicaid, which provides coverage of health and long-term care for low-income residents, is administered by states within broad federal rules and jointly funded by states and the federal government. Medicaid is a counter-cyclical program, meaning that more people become eligible and enroll during economic downturns; at the same time, states may face declines in revenues that make it difficult to fund the state share of funding for the program. As in past economic downturns, the federal government has provided additional financial assistance to states during the current pandemic to help them maintain their Medicaid programs at a time of growing need.  This brief presents the most current data for key indicators to help understand how various economic factors that could affect Medicaid enrollment and spending are changing in light of the pandemic as well as efforts to address the pandemic and the start of economic recovery.  An overview of the methods is in the Methods Box at the end of the brief, and a companion brief provides an overview of Medicaid Financing Basics.

What factors could affect Medicaid enrollment?

Medicaid enrollment is typically the primary driver of spending.  Administrative data for Medicaid show that after declines in enrollment from 2017 through 2019, total enrollment nationwide began to grow after February 2020, right before the pandemic began. Between February 2020 and April 2021, enrollment steadily increased to 82.3 million, an increase of 11.1 million, or 15.5%, from actual enrollment in February 2020. These trends in enrollment likely reflect changes in the economy as more people experience income and job loss and become eligible and enroll in Medicaid coverage as well as “maintenance of eligibility” (MOE) provisions in the Families First Coronavirus Response Act (FFCRA) that require states to ensure continuous coverage to current Medicaid enrollees to access a temporary increase in the federal Medicaid match rate.

Key economic indicators that could signal changes to Medicaid enrollment include those showing job and income loss such as the unemployment rate, unemployment insurance claims, and the employment-to-population ratio.  Unemployment rates and unemployment insurance filings capture people who are actively looking for or have recently lost employment, respectively, and may be affected by people who opt to leave the workforce altogether.  Employment-to-population ratios capture what share of the population is working overall.  All measures capture some aspect of income loss, which could make more people eligible for Medicaid. However, Medicaid enrollment changes may lag behind changes in broader economic metrics.  For example, when unemployment rises, increases in Medicaid enrollment may follow, but improvements in unemployment may not immediately translate to slower Medicaid growth. This effect was observed following the end of the Great Recession in 2009 when Medicaid spending and enrollment continued to grow in 2010 and 2011 and is due in part by MOE provisions that prevent states that accept additional federal funding from disenrolling Medicaid beneficiaries.

National data show sharp increases in the average unemployment rate and unemployment claims following the onset of the pandemic in March 2020, but they have moderated in more recent months.  Indicators of employment-to-population ratios also show precipitous declines at the start of the pandemic, unmatched by trends since 2008. While changes in indicators related to employment and jobs have moderated in more recent months, they are still not at pre-pandemic levels. For example, July 2021 saw a national unemployment rate of 5.4% across all states including DC, below the peak of 14.8% in April 2020 but still above 3.5% in February 2020, right before the pandemic.  Similarly, total unemployment claims peaked in May 2020 and have been steadily declining, but total claims in July 2021 were greater than February 2020.  Finally, the employment-to-population ratio dropped to a low of 51.3% in April 2020; the 58.4% ratio in July 2021 is below the February 2020 level of 61.1%.  Unemployment rates and unemployment claims were higher, and the employment-to-population ratios were lower relative to the Great Recession that started in December 2007.

For each employment indicator there was wide variation across states in the average over the most recent 12-month period compared to a year earlier.  Looking at the average for the most recent 12-month period (August 2020 to July 2021) compared to the same period in the prior year, the national unemployment rate decreased by 1%; however, growth across states varied significantly, from more than a 30% increase in Hawaii and Connecticut to a 33% decrease in New Hampshire. Measures continue to improve, with over half of states seeing declines in their average unemployment rate and number of unemployment claims and a quarter of states seeing growth in their average employment-to-population ratio when comparing the most recent 12-month average to the year prior. South Dakota was in the top 5 states with the most improvement in its 12-month average for at least two of the three indicators, and Connecticut, D.C., Hawaii, and Maryland were hardest hit, being in the top 5 with the largest changes in their 12-month averages for at least two of the three indicators.

Employment-related economic consequences are directly related to the proportion of jobs a state has in more impacted sectors. States, like Hawaii and Nevada, which rely heavily on more exposed sectors (restaurants and bars, travel and transportation, entertainment, etc.), saw larger changes in job-related indicators throughout the pandemic. On the other hand, states more reliant on less exposed sectors, like agriculture in the Midwestern states, fared better. The leisure and hospitality industries experienced the highest unemployment rates at the start of the pandemic, but other industries also reliant on in-person work, like mining, are now seeing higher rates of unemployment. Many individuals enrolled in Medicaid even before the pandemic are employed in exposed sectors (such as food and other service industries) and are particularly at risk for income or job loss. Additionally, state issued stay-at-home orders and personal social-distancing behaviors varied across states and also contributed decreased economic activity.

What factors could affect states’ ability to finance Medicaid?

States generally fund their share of Medicaid costs through general revenue collected from residents, businesses, and sales taxes. States must adopt balanced budgets, so during economic downturns when demand for services and programs like Medicaid increases, state revenues typically decline, putting pressure on state budgets.  To provide broad fiscal relief to states and to help support increases in Medicaid enrollment, the Families First Coronavirus Response Act (FFCRA) authorized a 6.2 percentage point increase in the federal match rate (“FMAP”) for states that meet certain “maintenance of eligibility” (MOE) requirements. The additional funds were retroactively available to states beginning January 1, 2020 and continue through the quarter in which the PHE period ends. While the current PHE declaration expires 90 days from July 20, 2021, the Biden Administration has notified states that the PHE will likely remain in place throughout CY 2021 and that states will receive 60 days-notice before the end of the PHE.

Measures of changes in state revenue can provide insight into states’ ability to finance the state share of Medicaid. State revenues are largely dependent on revenue from personal income taxes, corporate income taxes and sales taxes. The share of revenue coming from each of these sources varies, and 9 states have no personal income tax at all. In addition, each type of tax may be affected differently by changes in economic conditions.

State revenues overall have increased sharply in recent months, with unadjusted 12-month rolling averages for revenue now surpassing pre-pandemic averages. For the most recent 12-month rolling average (ending June 2021) compared to the 12-month average from February 2020, before the pandemic, average monthly total revenues are 13.4% higher. This is much improved from the 12-month period ending June 2020, the lowest point during the pandemic, which saw a 8.0% drop from the 12-month average from February 2020. Overall, states have not experienced revenue declines as large as original projections. While the data show steep revenue declines early in the pandemic, overall unadjusted revenues have rebounded in recent months, though some of the sharp increases in the recent 12-month rolling averages can be attributed to delayed income tax filing deadlines. Revenues appear to have surpassed pre-pandemic levels; however, there is variation across states, and the data pre-dates the Delta variant and is volatile due to changing income tax deadlines. States adapted to the changing outlook, adopting conservative FY 2021 budgets and then adopting FY 2022 budgets with increases in state spending and revenue after ending FY 2021 with surpluses.

State revenue changes vary across revenue sources, with personal income taxes faring better than sales taxes during the pandemic. Corporate income tax revenues are volatile and can fluctuate considerably from month to month. For the most recent 12-month rolling average (ending June 2021) compared to February 2020, before the pandemic, average monthly personal income taxes increased by 19.5%, corporate income taxes grew by 40.4%, and sales taxes grew by 6.3%. Most states pushed back their 2020 income tax filing deadline from April 15th to July 15th and their 2021 deadline to May 17th, delaying income tax revenue and causing the 12-month averages for May and June 2021 to contain two income tax collection months for many states. US total data is preliminary for April, May, and June 2021, due to delays by some states to report revenues as they close out the 2021 fiscal year.

There is considerable variation across states with regard to changes in revenues. Almost all states are now seeing an increase in average monthly total tax revenue for the most recent 12-month period (ending June 2021) compared to the prior year, with only 2 states experiencing declines. Changes in overall average monthly tax collections ranged from a decline of 18% in Alaska to growth of 53% in California for the most recent 12-month period compared to the prior year, and there was also variation by revenue source. Since the pandemic has disproportionately affected low income workers in the service industry, most states experienced smaller declines in personal income tax revenue than expected, especially for states with progressive income tax structures, where people with higher incomes pay a higher share of income tax.  In addition, income tax withholdings on the supplemental federal unemployment benefits may have also sustained state income tax revenues.

States that issued stay-at-home orders saw reduced sales tax revenues, and states that rely heavily on tourism, like Hawaii, Florida, and Nevada, or oil and gas, like Alaska and North Dakota, experienced larger revenue declinesSales tax revenues were bolstered by $600 weekly federal unemployment benefits under the CARES Act that allowed consumers to continue spending, the 2018 Supreme Court decision that authorized states to collect sales tax on online purchases, and increased spending on goods instead of services, which most states do not tax. While sales taxes on groceries have been shown to worsen income and racial inequalities, states that tax groceries saw smaller declines in sales tax revenue during the pandemic. Sales tax revenues are recovering more slowly than personal income and corporate income tax revenues, and states that rely more heavily on sales tax revenues and do not have an income tax experienced steeper declines in total tax revenues.

Looking Ahead

The ongoing health and economic effects of the pandemic will continue to have implications for Medicaid enrollment and financing. While revenues and employment indicators have improved, employment indicators have not yet returned to pre-pandemic levels and there remains a lot of variation across states. In addition, while indicators are improving on average across states, it is unclear how quickly and how much jobs and revenue in certain sectors of the economy will improve.  As the economy improves, what happens in certain sectors could greatly affect Medicaid as there have been disproportionate effects on low-wage workers who could be eligible for Medicaid.

Almost all states have adopted budgets for state fiscal year 2022 (which started July 1 for most states), and revenue and spending projections incorporated improvements in revenue tied to COVID-19 vaccination efforts and eased restrictions, assumptions about the duration of the PHE (which has implications for the temporary fiscal relief and continuous coverage requirements for Medicaid), and federal stimulus funds that were part of the American Rescue Plan. However, the spread of the Delta variant and the recent surge in COVID-19 cases and deaths casts more uncertainty about state economic conditions and the duration of the PHE.

Methods Overview

The data in this analysis draws on a range of sources, including the Bureau of Labor Statistics, Department of Labor, and State and Local Finance Initiative at Urban Institute.  We draw on the most current data available for each specific indicator. For most indicators, we examined both national and state-by-state changes over time. To avoid major fluctuations using monthly data, we calculate 12-month rolling averages and percent changes in 12-month rolling averages compared to the prior year period.

  • At the state level, we calculate the percent change in the most recent 12-month average compared to the prior year by taking the average of the measure (revenue, unemployment rate, etc.) for the most recent 12-month period and comparing to the same 12-month period the prior year. For example, the percent change calculation for June 2021 compares the average tax revenue from July 2020-June 2021 to the average tax revenue from July 2019-June 2020. When the most recent month’s revenue is not available for a state, we shift the 12-month comparison back to the most recent 12-months available and add a note to the figure. For example, total tax revenue for Nevada is not available for June 2021 so the most recent 12-month average is calculated using June 2020-May 2021 and compared to June 2019-May 2020.
  • Monthly unemployment claims are calculated by combining reported initial and continued unemployment claims for each week, and then aggregating into months using the date in which the filing week ended.
  • For the state level revenue data, state data is removed if there is one revenue outlier that heavily skews the average calculations for that state. When this occurs, a note is added to the figure.
  • All other data is pulled directly from sources and no additional adjustments are made. Revenue data is not adjusted for inflation.

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