When the value of a medical treatment differs across individuals, it may be socially beneficial to treat some, but not all, patients. If individuals are ignorant of their health status ex ante, they should be willing to purchase insurance fully covering treatments for high-benefit patients (Hs) and denying treatment for low-benefit patients (Ls). But if prognoses are observable but not verifiable, insurers may have trouble denying care to Ls. Deductibles force Ls to reveal their status by imposing a marginal cost on treatment, but at a price of incomplete risk-sharing. Lump-sum indemnities can similarly induce Ls to forgo treatment but are rare in health insurance markets. They were once more common and remain so in non-health markets. This...
textabstractWe consider a situation of full insurance coverage for prescription drugs where, at a ce...
Why do indemnity insurance plans cost substantially more per capita—77 % more in our study— than HMO...
We show that the logic of Arrow's theorem of the deductible, i.e. that it is optimal to focus insura...
In this paper we construct a much simplified model of private and public social decision-making rela...
This note presents a modest extension of the very useful "theorem of the deductible" (Arrow, America...
Health policy has long been preoccupied with the problem that health insurance stimulates spending (...
ContextHealth policy has long been preoccupied with the problem that health insurance stimulates spe...
Health insurance increases the demand for healthcare. Since the RAND Health Insurance Experiment in ...
The first chapter examines consumer choices of health insurance contracts. An important innovation i...
The first chapter examines consumer choices of health insurance contracts. An important innovation i...
This article describes the anatomy of health insurance. It begins by considering the optimal design ...
Health insurance is considered to be a special type of nonlife insurance with two important features...
textabstractGovernments around the world use health insurance as an instrument to establish universa...
We present arguments for treating health insurance and disability insurance in an integrated manner ...
The logic of Arrow’s theorem of the deductible, i.e. that it is optimal to focus insurance coverage ...
textabstractWe consider a situation of full insurance coverage for prescription drugs where, at a ce...
Why do indemnity insurance plans cost substantially more per capita—77 % more in our study— than HMO...
We show that the logic of Arrow's theorem of the deductible, i.e. that it is optimal to focus insura...
In this paper we construct a much simplified model of private and public social decision-making rela...
This note presents a modest extension of the very useful "theorem of the deductible" (Arrow, America...
Health policy has long been preoccupied with the problem that health insurance stimulates spending (...
ContextHealth policy has long been preoccupied with the problem that health insurance stimulates spe...
Health insurance increases the demand for healthcare. Since the RAND Health Insurance Experiment in ...
The first chapter examines consumer choices of health insurance contracts. An important innovation i...
The first chapter examines consumer choices of health insurance contracts. An important innovation i...
This article describes the anatomy of health insurance. It begins by considering the optimal design ...
Health insurance is considered to be a special type of nonlife insurance with two important features...
textabstractGovernments around the world use health insurance as an instrument to establish universa...
We present arguments for treating health insurance and disability insurance in an integrated manner ...
The logic of Arrow’s theorem of the deductible, i.e. that it is optimal to focus insurance coverage ...
textabstractWe consider a situation of full insurance coverage for prescription drugs where, at a ce...
Why do indemnity insurance plans cost substantially more per capita—77 % more in our study— than HMO...
We show that the logic of Arrow's theorem of the deductible, i.e. that it is optimal to focus insura...