I Guess the Nursing Homes don’t care

I used this site for the following numbers. In 2020, $217 billion in total federal and state was spent on long term support and services. According to Statista $683 billion in total was spent on Medicaid. Thus, 31.8% of the total was on long term care. From the long term care study, 1.4 million used only institutional long-term care. The average per person was $47,279 producing a total of $66,190,600,000. It represents 30.5% of the total medicaid spent. If we use the 69% factor representing the federal share of the total spent by medicare, we get: $66.2 x 0.69 = $45.7 billion as the federal government share for institutional long-term care. Using the 69% as the share of the total we get $149,73 billion. The portion of this that is for institutional long-term care is: 45.7/149.73 = 30.5%

Looking at 2023, we can use the 31.8% for long term care which gives us $192.7 billion paid by the federal government. (606 x 0.318) We can use the 30.5% to find the portion that is institutional care. $58.8 billion. (192.7 x .0305)

So, if the cut at a minimum is going to be $880 billion, the 2023 total of state and federal spending is what the Republicans are working to cut going forward. Of this number, $58.8 billion is the estimate at stake for the nursing home industry. Of course, if the federal funds are cut, the states are going to have to cut their share too.

So, why have we not heard from the nursing home industry? I mean, back in 2015, in my neck of the woods, a month in the nursing home was $10 to $12 thousand. I am confident the labor class cannot afford this, and I doubt that Walmart or Amazon can work their pricing magic on it. So why has the nursing home industry not come out against this Republican bulldozing of this part of the budget?