Health Insurance: Uninsured Insured

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Health Insurance

Uninsured
Insured
Two Comments
First of two comments:
From Princeton Economist Uwe Reinhardt:
Why does a country that spends close to 70
percent more on health care per capita than
the next most expensive health system in the
world [Germany] still leave close to 18 percent
of its population without the economic,
emotional and physiological benefits of health
insurance coverage?
Two Comments
Second comment: Most of us are not aware of
the financial burden we bear for health care
provided to ourselves and others.
Self pay for a visit to a hospital ER, say for a broken
leg.
Employers pay on average 11% of salary for health
benefits. Roughly equals $2/hr.
FICA-M
A TV in most states, a pay check in Delaware,
The figures, released early Tuesday by the U.S. Census
Bureau, show that 15.2% of Americans didn't have
coverage for all of last year, an increase of 2.4 million
people from 2001, when 14.6% were uninsured.

The 5.8% rise in the uninsured resulted from a decline in
the percentage of people covered by employer-based
insurance -- 61.3% last year, down from 62.6% the year
before. That deterioration, economists say, reflected
increases in unemployment and the rise in health-care
costs, which prompted some employers to drop coverage.
Number of Americans Who Lack
Health-Care Coverage Is Rising:
Census Bureau Counts 43.6 Million, WSJ 9/30/03

Young adults were less likely than any other age group to
have health insurance. Last year, 29.6% went without, up
from 28.1% the year before. Health analysts attribute the
increase to decisions by young, healthy workers to opt out
of employer-sponsored health plans as employee
contributions rise. In addition, they say, some younger
workers couldn't find jobs because of economic
conditions.
Mostly adults, not children half are childless adults.
What age group?
Poor and near-poor 60% have incomes above federal
poverty level
Workers and family members 80% in families with at
least 1 worker
Unskilled laborers, service workers.
Uwe Reinhardt, working stiffs


Who Are the Uninsured?
Do the uninsured receive necessary
health care?

Often No Compared to the Insured
Population, the Uninsured...
Have higher rates of preventable and/or untreated illness
Are less likely to receive care that they feel they need
Have more preventable hospitalizations
Have shorter hospital stays for the same conditions
Are hospitalized sicker and have poorer health outcomes
(including death)
The Uninsured
Are not known to be a sicker or higher-cost
population.
Pay higher medical fees. (NYT, 4/2/01) A New York
gynecologist says he gets $25 for a routine exam for a
woman insured by group health insurance and charges
$175 for the same exam for a woman without
insurance.
The care of the poor once was supported by the wealthy
and the insured, but now the opposite is happening.









Health Insurance and the
Consumer Role
Consumers demand health insurance and often
purchase it in markets
Two key issues that can lead to market failure:
Moral hazard
Adverse selection
Key Definitions
Moral hazard Health insurance affects
consumer demand for health care higher
utilization of covered services
Adverse selection When given a choice,
people who choose to purchase insurance are
likely to be a group with higher than average
losses. (Also applies to a choice between low-
option and high-option plans.)

The Demand for Health
Insurance
Why do consumers value health insurance?
Illness, injury and disability are to a large extent
random events
Hospitalizations, serious injury, and rehabilitation
and other advanced modern treatments can be very
expensive
Most households are averse to risk
What is risk aversion
What is Risk Aversion?
A simple test to see if you are risk adverse.
Which would you select?
* Your pay check, OR
* Double your pay check for correctly picking one coin
flip.
* Equal expected values; most of us are risk adverse
and select the certain $500 option.
Risk aversion - the degree to which a certain
income is preferred to a risky alternative with
the same expected income.
Private Market Insurance: A Simple Example
Start with 100 middle-aged executives sent by
XXumma Corp. to Eastern Europe for a year.
Suppose we can predict that one was going to have
a heart attack, requiring a $50k CABG procedure.
But, we dont know who will be the unlucky one.
Form a club with each exec putting in $500.
Actuarial fair premium = 1/100 X $50,000
Would executives be willing to pay a 10% mark-up
(loading fee) just to get their premium money back
(collectively) as a benefit payment?

Demand for Health Insurance Keys
Presence of aversion makes consumers willing
to pay to spread risk with others.
Insurance companies specialize in pricing risks,
not in taking risks.
Lesson from the theory of insurance: the losses
that are insured are: large, infrequent, random,
and not associated with a large moral hazard.
Health Insurance
Main Types
Fee-for-service (indemnity)
Managed care (pre-paid)
Key Terms
Deductible
Copay/Coinsurance
Stop Loss
Limit
Insurance: Declining Block
Pricing (Out-of-Pocket Spending)
OOPs
P
F
0.2 P
F
Co-Insurance

Deductible

Co-Pay

0

$
Spending

$100

$5,000

Stop Loss

Pricing Blocks: Deductibles,
Copays and Limits
OOPs
P
F
0.2 P
F
Co-Insurance

Deductible

Co-Pay

Spending

$100

$5,000

0

$
Limit

Question
Why do we observe deductibles, co-pays, limits,
and exclusions?
Moral Hazard and Demand
P
F
P

CP
F
D

DWL

Q
1
Q

Q
U
Practice Exercise
What is the relationship between price elasticity
of demand and size of the moral hazard
(deadweight loss)?
Question: If you designed a health
care plan
Hospital Care
Surgical & in-hosp medical
Outpatient doctor
Dental exams/cleaning
Mental health
Over the counter drugs
Flu shots

Patterns of Insurance Coverage
Type of
Health Care
Variance of
Financial
Risk
Demand
Elasticity
(RHIE)
% of People
Under 65
Insured
Hospital Care Highest -0.15 80
Surgical & in-
hosp medical
High -0.15 78
Outpatient
doctor
Medium -0.3 40-50
Dental Low -0.4 40
The losses that are insured are: large, infrequent, random,
and not associated with a large moral hazard.

Question
Youre an insurance broker.
Suppose the average health expenditure for an
adult equals $6000.
To make a quick $4000, would you accept
$10,000 to provide health insurance coverage for
one adult?
If not, whats the minimum premium youd
accept?

You be the benefit
consultant
Harvard University
Budget Problem
1994, Harvard University was facing a substantial
deficit in the employee benefits budget.
Offered both HMO plans and a more expensive
PPO health insurance plan.
Harvard generously subsidized the more expensive,
high-option PPO plans for employees.
Needed to reduce employee benefit costs
1995, Harvard decide to contribute the same
amount to employee plans regardless of which
type they chose.
Employee contributions increased for both the
HMO and PPO plans, but more severely in the
more expensive PPO plans.

Harvards Strategy
Changes in Employee Premiums
Employee Pays:
Premium Old New
Individual
PPO Flex
$2,733
$555 $1,152
Individual
HMO
$1,980
$277 $421
Family
PPO Flex
$6,238
$1,248 $2,208
Family HMO
$5,395
$776 $1,191
Enrollment in the more generous, more
expensive PPO plans decreased.
What would you predict about the
characteristics of those employees who
switched?
Employees Response:
Enrollment in the more generous, more
expensive PPO plans decreased.
What would you predict about the
characteristics of those employees who
switched?
Those employees who switched tended to be
younger and had spent less on medical care the
previous year.

Employees Response:
Final Results:
Due to decreased enrollment, premiums for the
high option PPO plans increased, making the
PPO option even more expensive =>
More employees were (voluntarily) pushed
out of the expensive PPO plans =>
By 1997, the PPO plan was discontinued,
completing the adverse selection death spiral
in just three years.
Plan Enrollment
1994 1995 1996 1997
Individual
PPO Flex
16% 13% 8%
discontinued
Individual
HMO
84% 87% 92% 100 %
Family
PPO Flex
22% 18% 11%
discontinued
Family HMO
78% 82% 89% 100 %
A Game: Pick One of the
Following 3 Opportunities:
C1: $350 paid in cash
C2: $1000 for correctly picking one
coin flip
C3: Flip the coin 1000 times. Your take
equals: %heads X $1000.

To Better Understand These Choices,
It Helps to Know Your Risks
Group insurance reduces secondary risk.
Two kinds of risk . . .
Primary risk: calculated odds that a bad event
will occur ($6000 expected value of health costs
for an adult.)
Secondary risk: chance that the actual payout
doesnt equal the calculated expected value. (The
calculation proves to be wrong.) Larger numbers
reduce secondary risk.


Secondary Risk (Variability) Declines as the
Size of Risk Sharing Pool Increases
$2,000
$3,000
$4,000
$5,000
$6,000
$7,000
$8,000
200 500 1,000 2,000 5,000 10,000 20,000
Number of People in Risk Pool
E
x
p
e
c
t
e
d

V
a
l
u
e

o
f

C
l
a
i
m
s
99% Confidence Limit
Expected Avg Loss = $5,000
Adverse effects of adverse selection
Start with a community-rated, self-pay health plan
Community of four with insurance premium = $3000
Person A with E(B) = $600
B E(B) = $2000
C E(B) = $4000
D E(B) = $6000
Marginal analysis: E(B) vs E(C)
Decision of healthier enrollees A and B?
Avg. cost per enrollee increases.
Premiums increase => C drops out.
and this can create a killer price spiral
Severe adverse selection can set in motion price spirals
that theoretically can cripple or destroy insurance
markets.





Percentage of Uninsured Workers
Ages 18-64, by Firm Size (1997)
34.7
20.9
15.8
18.2
29.7
12.7 12.3
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
Total <10 10-24 25-99 100-499 500-999 1000+
Firm Size
Small-business profits are getting pinched because
of price increases for employee health insurance.
Among small companies that posted lower earnings
in August vs. a year ago, 18% blamed higher
insurance costs, says a survey of 544 firms by the
National Federation of Independent Business trade
group. In a similar survey a year ago, 11% blamed
health insurance costs for their earnings dip.

Rising health costs take bite out of
small biz USA Today 10/5/03
Ouch!

While the average health insurance
premium for workers jumped 13.9%
this year from 2002, the increase was
bigger for small employers:
3-9 workers 16.6%
10-24 15.2%
25-49 14.3%
50-199 15.9%
Source: Kaiser Family Foundation
How to Price Insurance Policies?
Premium = f ( Expected value of claims,
loading costs ).
Loading cost: administrative and other costs
associated with underwriting insurance policies.
Loading costs = (risk premium + administrative
costs + marketing costs + profits)
Loading costs = price of insurance

Typical Loading Fees by Group Size
As a Percent of Benefits (Phelps, p. 343)
17.5
11.5
35
6.5
25
70
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
Individual 1-10 11-100 100-200 201-1000 1000+
P
e
r
c
e
n
t
a
g
e
Question: Why is Small Group Health
Insurance So Expensive?
Per capita loading costs decrease as firm group
size increases.
Loading costs = (risk premium + administrative
costs + marketing costs + profits)
Small group purchasers have less bargaining
power.
Adverse selection.

Do People Choose to Die?
Actuaries have found that
statistically people who buy life
insurance are more likely than
average to die.
Is this a moral hazard or an
adverse selection problem?
Possible Solutions to the Adverse Selection
Problem?
Waiting periods
Preexisting condition exclusions
Risk rating (underwriting)
Insurance that precludes individual selection
according to subscribers perceptions of their own
risk (Universal health insurance, employment-
based insurance)
Possible Solutions to the Moral
Hazard Problem?
(Higher) co-payments
(Higher) deductibles
Utilization review
Since size of moral hazard problems (DWL)
increases with price elasticity of demand, offer less
generous insurance for specific services with more
elastic demand (e.g., mental health coverage).

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