Low-cost Medicaid managed care plans mostly cut their costs by reducing how much care, and how much high-quality care, their members receive.
That is the conclusion of a new study published by the National Bureau of Economic Research.

The researchers note that
Effects via quantities, rather than differences in negotiated prices, explain these patterns. Rather than reducing “wasteful” spending, low-spending plans cause broad reductions in the use of medical services – including low-cost, high-value care – and worsen beneficiary satisfaction and health. Supply side tools circumvent the classic trade-off between financial risk protection and moral hazard, but give rise instead to a cost/quality trade-off.
Learn more from the National Bureau of Economic Research report “Are All Managed Care Plans Created Equal? Evidence From Random Plan Assignment in Medicaid.”

