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Editor's Pick

Man Admits to Medicaid Fraud—That’s Not the Worst Part

Michael F. Cannon

KFF Health News correspondent Katheryn Houghton posts a fascinating article on a Montana man who admits to an ongoing fraud against Medicaid. I rail against health care fraud. I edited and published a 500-page book full of examples of rapacious health care fraud and government indifference. What this guy is doing is clearly illegal. I would rather he stop. Yet I’m not sure I could vote to convict him.

This guy is basically like Jean Valjean in the novel Les Misérables, so that’s what I will call him. Like the original Valjean, he feels like he’s facing a life-and-death choice. The article hints that Republicans’ recent Medicaid changes are to blame, but they aren’t. The policy failure is that the government is putting its boot on Valjean’s face every single day. Republicans, Democrats, regulators, and industry lobbyists are all playing the part of Inspector Javert. Impartial journalism by default must explore whether the government is creating the need it hopes to subsidize.


Colm Wilkinson as Jean Valjean in 1985

Valjean is in his late 30s. He is struggling with alcoholism, bipolar disorder, and insomnia. He has a job making sandwiches. He’s paying his taxes. He is in treatment. Taking his meds. Accessing services. Taking classes to earn a government license to work as an addiction counselor. And he is succeeding. He is climbing the economic ladder. His income has risen enough that he is now ineligible for Medicaid. (This has nothing to do with the new Republican budget. It’s a rule Democrats created. Had the GOP budget not passed, he would still be ineligible.) This is a good thing.

Unfortunately, Valjean sees Medicaid as his best option. His other coverage options have too many gaps (Obamacare) and/​or are too expensive (his employer’s health plan and Obamacare). From his perspective, losing Medicaid would reduce his income and consumption. He believes it would cause him to fall back into addiction, or worse.

Note that the government is creating a perverse incentive for him not to improve both his life and the lives of others in his community via productive work. In what may be the best, most colorful description I’ve ever heard of government-created low-wage traps (and the Samaritan’s Dilemma broadly), Valjean tells Houghton:

“They’ll give you a bone if you stay in the mud. But you have to stay there.”

(Forget addiction counseling. Somebody give that man a typewriter.)

Facing the prospect of either reducing his work effort and income to remain eligible for Medicaid (he did this for a time), or losing Medicaid subsidies, Valjean found a third way:

“I only saw one option. Fudge the numbers.”

Valjean’s earnings amount to $24,100 annually, roughly $2,500 above the $21,597 cutoff for Medicaid eligibility. He is choosing to lie to the government by claiming his earnings are below the cutoff so he can keep receiving Medicaid subsidies. That’s a crime. It’s anti-democratic: he is directly subverting the will of legislators who put those rules in place, and the voters who elected them. He’s breaking the social contract. He could go to jail.

Part of the reason I’m not sure I could vote to convict is that he appears to be in a fragile, vulnerable place. Valjean is a low-income, low-skilled, hardworking, bipolar, insomniac/​addict who is struggling to make his life better. Recovery. Is. Not. Easy:

“I don’t want to be a fraud. I don’t want to die. Those shouldn’t be the only two options.”

The other part is how he came to be in this position: the government took away his other options. The government is not just denying him a bone. It is beating him down as he tries to climb up from the mud.

The government is adding to Valjean’s struggles by actively making him poorer. It is directly taxing his earnings to the tune of $5,100 per year: $450 in Montana income tax, $950 in federal income tax, and $3,700 in federal payroll taxes. (Were Congress to eliminate the federal deficit by increasing everyone’s taxes proportionally, Valjean would lose another $1,350.) Since Valjean is declining his employer’s health plan, the federal tax exclusion for employer-sponsored health insurance is stripping him of maybe $7,600 of additional cash income. These are not small amounts to someone who’s juggling six prescriptions near the poverty line. 

Valjean also pays Montana’s car registration fee and both an 18.4‑cent per gallon federal gas tax and Montana’s 33.75-cent per gallon gas tax (Montana’s is higher than the median) every time he uses his car. He pays a 12.8 percent federal Universal Service Fund tax and a 7.03 percent state tax on his phone plan. Wherever he finds lodging, some of the $1,937 that Montana collects per capita in state and local property taxes is surely finding him. If he smokes, he pays both the $1.0066 per pack federal cigarette tax and a $1.70 per pack Montana excise tax. Montana requires addiction counselors to obtain a license from the state, which acts as a further tax on his earnings. Tariffs are a tax on necessities that Valjean needs to live. Given all that, I don’t know whether I could vote to convict him for tax evasion, either.

The government also appears to be doing everything in its power to increase the prices for Valjean’s medical and addiction treatment. The federal tax exclusion for employer-sponsored health insurance increases every medical price he faces. Regulations that require consumers to purchase certain types of coverage indirectly increase prices for the underlying medical goods and services. Through various mechanisms, Medicare and Medicaid further increase private-sector medical prices. Montana imposes licensing regulations on medical professionals, addiction counselors, chemical-dependence programs, and sober-living facilities; licensing tends to make such services and facilities more expensive and scarce. Federal regulation makes Valjean’s six prescription medications more expensive. At a minimum, it increases prices for those medications. It likely also requires him to incur the additional cost of obtaining a doctor’s prescription when doing so is unnecessary. 

The government then does the same thing to prices for health insurance. Regulations that require consumers to purchase additional coverage put direct upward pressure on health insurance premiums. Everything that the government does via regulation, the tax code, Medicare, and Medicaid that increases medical prices or encourages more intensive practice styles puts indirect upward pressure on premiums. Obamacare imposes health insurance price controls that double or even triple premiums for many healthy consumers. It’s as if the government wants to ensure that what little money it leaves Valjean doesn’t go very far. 

Not for nothing, but those same Obamacare price controls cause gaps in addiction-treatment coverage—which may be why Valjean fears an Obamacare plan would be a death sentence. Perhaps Houghton could explore.

We’re not just talking about well-to-do suburban voters with financial capital to protect them. And not even recent high school and college graduates with supportive families and bright futures. The government is stripping essential freedoms from and imposing crushing burdens on low-skilled, thirtysomething addicts who are struggling so much, they feel like they’re going to die. Journalism does Valjean a further injustice when it focuses only on the bone and not the boot.

Valjean is committing a crime, and that’s wrong. Yet the government is committing more crimes against him than he is against it. Fewer people would commit Valjean’s crime if the government did not do so much to take away their freedom. 

I say free Valjean.

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