Brief State-by-State Coverage and Government Spending Implications of the Better Care Reconciliation Act
Linda J. Blumberg, Matthew Buettgens, John Holahan, Bowen Garrett, Robin Wang
Display Date
File
File
Download Report
(622.84 KB)

Updated Analysis, July 18, 2017

On June 28, 2017, we released a state-by-state analysis of the coverage and federal health care spending effects of the Better Care Reconciliation Act. On July 13, 2017, the Senate introduced a revised version of the bill. Below we provide a map and tables showing the state-by-state effects of this new version on insurance coverage and federal and state health care spending. This analysis does not include Title III, the so-called Cruz provisions.

Click here to view map of projected changes in uninsured rate under revised BCRA

Click here to view map of projected changes in federal Medicaid/CHIP spending under revised BCRA

Click here to download tables with data on insurance coverage and health care spending effects of revised BCRA


 

Previous Analysis

The Better Care Reconciliation Act (BCRA) was introduced in the Senate on June 22, 2017, and is now under debate. The bill would eliminate much of the Affordable Care Act. In this report, we present state-by-state estimates of the impact of the BCRA on health care coverage and costs. Nationwide, we find that there would be 24.7 million more uninsured people under the BCRA by 2022. Federal funding for Medicaid, premium tax credits, and cost sharing reductions would be $140.4 billion lower under the BCRA in 2022, while state Medicaid spending would increase by $565 million.

Click here to view map of projected changes in uninsured rate under BCRA

Click here to view map of projected changes in federal health care spending under BCRA

Click here to download tables with state-by-state data by adults, children, race, and ethnicity

Click here to download tables with state-by-state data by age, family work status, and income

Research Areas Health and health care
Tags Federal health care reform Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program  Private insurance Health insurance
Policy Centers Health Policy Center