{"title":"What Is Federalism in Healthcare For?","authors":"Abbe R Gluck, Nicole Huberfeld","doi":"","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>The Affordable Care Act (ACA) offers a window into modern American federalism--and modern American nationalism--in action. The ACA's federalism is defined not by separation between state and federal, but rather by a national structure that invites state-led implementation. As it turns out, that structure was only a starting point for a remarkably dynamic and adaptive implementation process that has generated new state-federal arrangements. States move back and forth between different structural models vis-a-vis the federal government; internal state politics produce different state choices; states copy, compete, and cooperate with each other; and negotiation with federal counterparts is a near constant. These characteristics have endured through the change in presidential administration. This Article presents the results of a study that tracked the details of the ACA's federalism-related implementation from 2012 to 2017. Among the questions that motivated the project: Does the ACA actually effectuate \"federalism,\" and what are federalism’s key attributes when entwined with national statutory implementation? A federal law on the scale of the ACA presented a rare opportunity to investigate implementation from a statute's very beginning and to provide the concrete detail often wanting in federalism scholarship. The findings deconstruct assumptions about federalism made by theorists of all stripes, from formalist to modern. Federalism’s commonly invoked attributes--including autonomy, cooperation, experimentation, and variation--have not been dependent on any particular architecture of either state-federal separation or entanglement, even though theorists typically call on \"federalism\" to produce them. Instead, these attributes have been generated in ACA implementation across virtually every kind of governance model--that is, regardless whether states expand Medicaid; get waivers; or operate their own insurance exchanges or let the federal government do it for them. This makes it extraordinarily challenging to measure which structural arrangements are most \"federalist,\" especially because the various federalism attributes are not always present together. The study also uncovers major theoretical difficulties when it comes to healthcare: Without a clear conception of the U.S. healthcare system’s goals, how can we know which structural arrangements serve it best, much less whether they are working? If healthcare federalism is a mechanism to produce particular policy outcomes, we should determine whether locating a particular facet of healthcare design in the states versus the federal government positively affects, for example, healthcare cost, access, or quality. If, instead, healthcare federalism serves structural aims regardless of policy ends--for instance, reserving power to states in the interest of sovereignty or checks and balances--we should examine whether it does in fact accomplish those goals, and we should justify why those goals outweigh the moral concerns that animate health policy. The ACA did not cause this conceptual confusion, but it retained and built on a fragmented healthcare landscape that already was riddled with structural and moral compromises. This does not mean that federalism is an empty concept or that it does not exist in the ACA. Federalism scholars tend to argue for particular structural arrangements based on prior goals and values. The ACA's architecture challenges whether any of these goals and values are unique to federalism or any particular expression of it. At the same time, the ACA's implementation is clearly a story about state leverage, intrastate democracy, and state policy autonomy within, not apart from, a national statutory scheme. Its implementation illustrates how federalism is a proxy for many ideas and challenges us to ask what we are really fighting over, or seeking, when we invoke the concept in healthcare and beyond.</p>","PeriodicalId":51386,"journal":{"name":"Stanford Law Review","volume":"70 6","pages":"1689-803"},"PeriodicalIF":4.9000,"publicationDate":"2018-06-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Stanford Law Review","FirstCategoryId":"90","ListUrlMain":"","RegionNum":1,"RegionCategory":"社会学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"Social Sciences","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
The Affordable Care Act (ACA) offers a window into modern American federalism--and modern American nationalism--in action. The ACA's federalism is defined not by separation between state and federal, but rather by a national structure that invites state-led implementation. As it turns out, that structure was only a starting point for a remarkably dynamic and adaptive implementation process that has generated new state-federal arrangements. States move back and forth between different structural models vis-a-vis the federal government; internal state politics produce different state choices; states copy, compete, and cooperate with each other; and negotiation with federal counterparts is a near constant. These characteristics have endured through the change in presidential administration. This Article presents the results of a study that tracked the details of the ACA's federalism-related implementation from 2012 to 2017. Among the questions that motivated the project: Does the ACA actually effectuate "federalism," and what are federalism’s key attributes when entwined with national statutory implementation? A federal law on the scale of the ACA presented a rare opportunity to investigate implementation from a statute's very beginning and to provide the concrete detail often wanting in federalism scholarship. The findings deconstruct assumptions about federalism made by theorists of all stripes, from formalist to modern. Federalism’s commonly invoked attributes--including autonomy, cooperation, experimentation, and variation--have not been dependent on any particular architecture of either state-federal separation or entanglement, even though theorists typically call on "federalism" to produce them. Instead, these attributes have been generated in ACA implementation across virtually every kind of governance model--that is, regardless whether states expand Medicaid; get waivers; or operate their own insurance exchanges or let the federal government do it for them. This makes it extraordinarily challenging to measure which structural arrangements are most "federalist," especially because the various federalism attributes are not always present together. The study also uncovers major theoretical difficulties when it comes to healthcare: Without a clear conception of the U.S. healthcare system’s goals, how can we know which structural arrangements serve it best, much less whether they are working? If healthcare federalism is a mechanism to produce particular policy outcomes, we should determine whether locating a particular facet of healthcare design in the states versus the federal government positively affects, for example, healthcare cost, access, or quality. If, instead, healthcare federalism serves structural aims regardless of policy ends--for instance, reserving power to states in the interest of sovereignty or checks and balances--we should examine whether it does in fact accomplish those goals, and we should justify why those goals outweigh the moral concerns that animate health policy. The ACA did not cause this conceptual confusion, but it retained and built on a fragmented healthcare landscape that already was riddled with structural and moral compromises. This does not mean that federalism is an empty concept or that it does not exist in the ACA. Federalism scholars tend to argue for particular structural arrangements based on prior goals and values. The ACA's architecture challenges whether any of these goals and values are unique to federalism or any particular expression of it. At the same time, the ACA's implementation is clearly a story about state leverage, intrastate democracy, and state policy autonomy within, not apart from, a national statutory scheme. Its implementation illustrates how federalism is a proxy for many ideas and challenges us to ask what we are really fighting over, or seeking, when we invoke the concept in healthcare and beyond.
《平价医疗法案》(Affordable Care Act, ACA)提供了一扇了解现代美国联邦制和现代美国民族主义的窗口。ACA的联邦制不是由州和联邦的分离来定义的,而是由一个国家结构来定义的,这个结构邀请各州主导实施。事实证明,这种结构只是一个起点,一个非常有活力和适应性的实施过程产生了新的州-联邦安排。与联邦政府相比,各州在不同的结构模式之间来回转换;国家内部政治产生不同的国家选择;国家之间相互模仿、竞争和合作;与联邦政府的谈判几乎是家常便饭。这些特点经历了总统政权的更迭。本文介绍了一项研究的结果,该研究追踪了2012年至2017年ACA联邦制相关实施的细节。在推动这个项目的问题中:ACA是否真的实现了“联邦制”,当联邦制与国家法律实施交织在一起时,联邦制的关键属性是什么?《平价医疗法案》这样规模的联邦法律提供了一个难得的机会,可以从法规的一开始就调查其实施情况,并提供联邦制奖学金中经常缺乏的具体细节。这些发现解构了从形式主义到现代的各种理论家对联邦制的假设。联邦制的常用属性——包括自治、合作、实验和变化——并不依赖于州-联邦分离或纠缠的任何特定架构,尽管理论家通常呼吁“联邦制”来产生它们。相反,在ACA的实施过程中,这些属性已经在几乎所有类型的治理模式中产生——也就是说,无论各州是否扩大医疗补助计划;获得豁免;或者经营他们自己的保险交易所,或者让联邦政府为他们做。这使得衡量哪种结构安排是最“联邦主义”的非常具有挑战性,特别是因为各种联邦主义属性并不总是同时出现。这项研究还揭示了医疗保健方面的主要理论难题:如果对美国医疗保健系统的目标没有明确的概念,我们如何知道哪种结构安排最能服务于它,更不用说它们是否有效了?如果医疗联邦制是一种产生特定政策结果的机制,我们应该确定将医疗保健设计的特定方面定位在州政府与联邦政府之间是否会产生积极影响,例如,医疗保健成本、访问或质量。相反,如果医疗联邦制服务于结构性目标,而不考虑政策目的——例如,为了主权或制衡的利益而将权力保留给各州——我们应该检查它是否实际上实现了这些目标,我们应该证明为什么这些目标超过了推动医疗政策的道德关切。ACA并没有造成这种概念上的混乱,但它保留并建立在一个支离破碎的医疗格局上,而这个格局已经充斥着结构性和道德上的妥协。这并不意味着联邦制是一个空洞的概念,也不意味着联邦制在ACA中不存在。联邦制学者倾向于主张基于先前目标和价值观的特定结构安排。ACA的架构挑战了这些目标和价值观是联邦制独有的,还是联邦制的任何特定表达。与此同时,ACA的实施显然是一个关于国家杠杆、州内民主和国家政策自主的故事,而不是脱离国家法定计划。它的实施说明了联邦制是如何代表许多想法的,并挑战我们问自己,当我们在医疗保健等领域援引这一概念时,我们真正在为什么而战,或在寻求什么。