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For some states, Medicaid expansion may be a tough fiscal call

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Matt Salo, director of the National Association of Medicaid Directors, notes that states already are struggling to cover their share of Medicaid, which is the fastest-growing part of state budgets. “Ten percent of a very large number is a lot of money,” Salo says.

If history is a guide, it might be years before the recalcitrant states agree to participate — if they ever do.

The federal government launched Medicaid as an optional program in January 1966. Today every state participates, but that wasn’t always the case: Only six states signed up initially. Eight states didn’t join until 1970, and Arizona didn’t participate until 1982. And it took years for every state to join the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) expansion Congress approved in 1997.

As of now, Medicaid covers about 60 million people, mainly children, pregnant women, disabled adults and the elderly with household incomes at or below 133 percent of the federal poverty level, which is $11,170 for an individual and $23,050 for a family of four. But under the Affordable Care Act expansion, Medicaid would cover anyone with a household income at or below 138 percent of the federal poverty level — roughly $15,400 per year for an individual and $31,800 for a family of four — including childless adults for the first time in many states.

In addition to the new people who will be eligible for the program under the new guidelines, millions of people who qualify now but are not enrolled are expected to sign up through health insurance exchanges and automatic enrollment programs.

As many as 13 million low-income people, who are likely to be sicker than much of the population, are expected to enroll through the exchanges, says Salo. States will have to pay for those new members at their regular Medicaid matching rate.

When you combine that enrollment bump — which will happen whether or not a state opts to expand its Medicaid program — with the steady increase in health care costs generally, some states may decline to participate in the expansion, even if they do have to forfeit federal dollars.

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