As health expenditure and need for corresponding funding rises, resorting to topping up insurance can seem natural. Complementary and supplementary insurances are both topping up contracts and, as such, are treated as one in the theoretical literature on optimal insurance. We argue that distinguishing them is crucial, and should be considered carefully when defining policies impacting the structure of the health insurance system, as these two kinds of insurance can have opposite effects on social insurance coverage. In this model, the optimal social insurance rate is defined endogenously and varies according to redistribution and the ex-post moral hazard characteristics of the insurance. This game has three stages and is solved through ba...
According to economic theory, health insurance raises medical care consumptions by inducing ex-post ...
This paper investigates the topping-up scheme in health insurance when both public and private insur...
This paper considers an economy where individuals differ in productivity and in risk. Rochet (1991) ...
As health expenditure and need for corresponding funding rises, resorting to topping up insurance c...
As health expenditure and need for corresponding funding rises, resorting to topping up insurance c...
As health expenditure and need for corresponding funding rises, resorting to topping up insurance c...
As health expenditure and need for corresponding funding rises, resorting to topping up insurance c...
As health expenditure and need for corresponding funding rises, resorting to topping up insurance c...
This paper investigates the topping-up scheme in health insurance when both public and private firm...
This paper investigates the topping-up scheme in health insurance when both public and private insu...
This paper investigates the topping-up scheme in health insurance when both public and private insu...
This paper investigates the topping-up scheme in health insurance when both public and private insu...
According to economic theory, health insurance raises medical care consumptions by inducing ex-post ...
Most developed nations provide generous coverage of care services, using either a tax financed healt...
According to economic theory, health insurance raises medical care consumptions by inducing ex-post ...
According to economic theory, health insurance raises medical care consumptions by inducing ex-post ...
This paper investigates the topping-up scheme in health insurance when both public and private insur...
This paper considers an economy where individuals differ in productivity and in risk. Rochet (1991) ...
As health expenditure and need for corresponding funding rises, resorting to topping up insurance c...
As health expenditure and need for corresponding funding rises, resorting to topping up insurance c...
As health expenditure and need for corresponding funding rises, resorting to topping up insurance c...
As health expenditure and need for corresponding funding rises, resorting to topping up insurance c...
As health expenditure and need for corresponding funding rises, resorting to topping up insurance c...
This paper investigates the topping-up scheme in health insurance when both public and private firm...
This paper investigates the topping-up scheme in health insurance when both public and private insu...
This paper investigates the topping-up scheme in health insurance when both public and private insu...
This paper investigates the topping-up scheme in health insurance when both public and private insu...
According to economic theory, health insurance raises medical care consumptions by inducing ex-post ...
Most developed nations provide generous coverage of care services, using either a tax financed healt...
According to economic theory, health insurance raises medical care consumptions by inducing ex-post ...
According to economic theory, health insurance raises medical care consumptions by inducing ex-post ...
This paper investigates the topping-up scheme in health insurance when both public and private insur...
This paper considers an economy where individuals differ in productivity and in risk. Rochet (1991) ...