Fiscal Shenanigans, Targeted
Federal Health Care Funds, and Patient Mortality Katherine Baicker
(Dartmouth) and
Douglas Staiger (Dartmouth)
ABSTRACT
The federal
government spends billions of dollars each year on programs
designed to increase the resources available to hospitals
that serve the poor. This paper explores the intended and
unintended effects of such targeted funds. First, how do
these funds distort the behavior of state and local
governments who wish to appropriate the funds for other
uses? Second, to the extent that these funds do increase
resources in the targeted hospitals, do patients benefit? We
use the rapid and uneven growth in Medicaid Disproportionate
Share Hospital (DSH) payments across states and hospitals to
answer these questions. We identify states that were most
able to appropriate DSH funds and show that, while DSH
payments to public hospitals in these states were
systematically diverted, DSH payments to other hospitals and
in other states were not diverted. Additional resources that
were made available to hospitals (rather than appropriated
by the state) were associated with significant declines in
infant and post-heart attack mortality. A range of evidence
suggests that these improvements were due to better hospital
care. Overall, our analysis implies that public subsidies
can be an effective mechanism for improving medical care and
outcomes for the poor, but that the impact is limited by the
ability of state and local government to divert the targeted
funds.