A New Approach to Risk-Spreading via Coverage-Expansion Subsidies
The persistently large number of uninsured, roughly 40 million per year since 1993, continues to elicit bipartisan policy interest. Coverage-expansion proposals without mandates, by far the most common since the defeat of the Clinton plan, must address risk-pooling realities in private markets. Insurers have strong financial incentives to segment risks and minimize pooling of heterogeneous risks, and narrow risk-pooling will diminish the adequacy of premium subsidies based on income alone, at least for higher-risk individuals. The current debate over flat tax credits and the non-group market is a case in point (Blumberg, 2001; Center for Studying Health System Change, 2002; Jack Hadley and James D. Reschovsky, 2002). We, along with nine other teams, were asked to develop a proposal that would expand coverage in a large and creative way (see Holahan et al., 2001). The proposal we developed would subsidize low-income individuals and families but also addresses the issue of inefficient and inequitable risk-pooling.
Year of publication: |
2003
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Authors: | Holahan, John ; Nichols, Len M. ; Blumberg, Linda J. ; Shen, Yu-Chu |
Published in: |
American Economic Review. - American Economic Association - AEA. - Vol. 93.2003, 2, p. 277-282
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Publisher: |
American Economic Association - AEA |
Saved in:
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