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Study: Medicaid expansion helps improve finances of Michigan’s low-income residents

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Healthy Michigan means better credit for Michigan’s low-income residents. That’s according to a new study on the state’s Medicaid expansion released Monday. It found that people on the plan improved their financial health after getting the insurance coverage.

Sarah Miller is a professor at the University of Michigan’s Ross School of Business. She worked on the study. Miller says they found that because people were in less financial stress health-wise, they didn’t overdraw their credit cards and they paid bills on time. That means their credit scores got better.

Miller said that can have a long-reaching impact.

“Having a higher credit score, being less likely to be in this very sub-prime region of the credit score distribution, can open up a lot of opportunities to borrow and maybe take out an auto loan and be able to get a car and be able to go to work,” Miller said.

Researchers tracked changes in people’s financial health using data from the state. But the researchers did not have access to individual’s identities.

“We actually found, I thought, really striking evidence that around the time people enrolled in the program, you saw a lot of these measures of financial distress really fall substantially,” said Miller.

You can read the study, published by the National Bureau of Economic Research, here.

Before becoming the newest Capitol reporter for the Michigan Public Radio Network, Cheyna Roth was an attorney. She spent her days fighting it out in court as an assistant prosecuting attorney for Ionia County. Eventually, Cheyna took her investigative and interview skills and moved on to journalism. She got her masters at Michigan State University and was a documentary filmmaker, podcaster, and freelance writer before finding her home with NPR. Very soon after joining MPRN, Cheyna started covering the 2016 presidential election, chasing after Donald Trump, Hillary Clinton, and all their surrogates as they duked it out for Michigan. Cheyna also focuses on the Legislature and criminal justice issues for MPRN. Cheyna is obsessively curious, a passionate storyteller, and an occasional backpacker. Follow her on Twitter at @Cheyna_R
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