Lecture 7 - 9/23/99
Table 6.1
Self-(Adverse) Selection
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Why it arises
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Role of experience rating, risk classification, underwriting, structuring
benefits
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Phelps diagrams 11.1 and 11.2
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Case in which insurer cannot risk classify
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Phelps diagram 11.3 for separating equilibrium (Rothschild & Stiglitz
1976)
State Strategies to Reduce the Growing Number of Persons Without Health
Insurance
Frank Sloan, Christopher Conover, Mark Hall
Why So Many Uninsured?
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Medical underwriting
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High cost premiums (including role of tax subsidy, lack of economies of
scale in individual coverage)
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"Crowding out" of private coverage
Reform Strategies
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Expansion of public coverage (probably not a reform as such)
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Policies aimed at increasing affordability of coverage
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Policies aimed at increasing availability of coverage
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Rate compression (community rating)
Roles of Community Rating
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Mandatory community rating. What it is.
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Phelps diagram 11.4
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Summary
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Community rating in employee groups -- job lock
Expansion of Public Coverage
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Effect of fedearal subsidy on states' Medicaid decisions
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Federal coverage mandates, such as for pregnant women and children up to
6
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Medicaid expenditures up to 4X 1987-1998, but number of uninsured up
Policies Aimed at Increasing Affordability of (Private) Coverage
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High risk pools for medically uninsurable
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Exceptions for small firm group and/or individuals from state-mandated
benefits
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Medical savings accounts
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Purchasing cooperatives
Policies Aimed at Increasing Availability of Coverage
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Guaranteed issue
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Guaranteed renewability
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Limitations on pre-existing conditions
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Portability requirements
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Community rating (see rate compression below)
Rate Compression
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Pure community rating
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Rating bands
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Adjusted or modified community rating
Possible Unintended Consequences of Reform
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Public insurance may crowd out private insurance
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Subsidies to reduce premiums may be insufficient
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Restrictions on medical underwriting may cause increased premiums
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Community rating may encourage low-risk persons (groups) to drop coverage
Empirical Analysis
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Sloan/Conover 1998 analysis of probability of being uninsured using Current
Population Survey data for adults 1989-94
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Hall 1999 interviews with agents, insurers, and regulators (1997-8) and
literature review
Findings: Promoting Affordability
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Some crowiding out private coverage by Medicaid although overall probablility
of having public or private coverage increased
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Only affordability policy that increased probability of being insured
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Failures: selective removal of benefit mandates; offering bare bones policies;
employer tax credits and other means of subsidizing coverage
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Public purchasing cooperatives very slight positive effect: <10% of
groups eligible