Market failure in long-term private health insurance markets: a proposed solution


Autoria(s): Brown, H. S.; Connelly, L. B.
Contribuinte(s)

L. Sarno

M. Taylor

Data(s)

01/01/2005

Resumo

Recently, private health insurance rates have declined in many countries. In places requiring community rating in their health insurance premiums, a major cause is age-based adverse selection. However, even in countries without community rating, a de facto type of partial community rating tends to occur. In this note, a modified version of Pauly et al.'s guaranteed renewability model, which addresses the problem of age-based adverse selection (Pauly et al., 1995) is presented. Their model is extended from three to 35 periods. Also, probabilities are allowed to increase by age for low-risk types using actual age-based probabilities. This extension of their work shows that private health insurance contracts available stray far from optimal contracts that deal with age-based adverse selection. This suggests that government actions to affect private insurance options are warranted.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:74916

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Routledge

Palavras-Chave #Economics #C1 #340200 Applied Economics #720204 Industry policy
Tipo

Journal Article