id okr-10986-19694
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-196942021-04-23T14:03:44Z How Adverse Selection Affects the Health Insurance Market Belli, Paolo AGENTS ASYMMETRIC INFORMATION AVERAGE COSTS COMPENSATION COMPETITIVE MARKETS COMPULSORY INSURANCE CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK CROSS SUBSIDIZATION ECONOMICS EQUILIBRIUM FREE ENTRY HEALTH CARE HEALTH CONDITIONS HEALTH INSURANCE HEALTH INSURANCE COVERAGE HEALTH INSURERS HEALTH NEEDS HEALTH STATUS IMPERFECT INFORMATION INCOME INDEMNITY INSURANCE COMPANIES INSURANCE CONTRACTS INSURANCE MARKETS INSURANCE OPTIONS INSURANCE PLANS INSURANCE SYSTEMS MARGINAL COST MARGINAL COSTS MARKET EQUILIBRIUM MARKET POWER MEDICARE MORAL HAZARD PARETO OPTIMAL PARTIAL INSURANCE PERFECT INFORMATION POLICY RESEARCH PREMIUMS PRIVATE INFORMATION PRIVATE INSURANCE PRIVATE SECTOR PUBLIC HEALTH PUBLIC INSURANCE RISK ADJUSTERS RISK AVERSION SCALE ECONOMIES SERVICE DELIVERY SOCIAL WELFARE STREAMS TRANSACTION COSTS WELFARE FUNCTION Adverse selection can be defined as strategic behavior by the more informed partner in a contract against the interest of the less informed partner(s). In the health insurance field, this manifests itself through healthy people choosing managed care and less healthy people choosing more generous plans. Drawing on theoretical literature on the problem of adverse selection in the health insurance market, the author synthesizes concepts developed piecemeal over more than 20 years, using two examples and revisiting the classical contribution of Rothschild and Stiglitz. He highlights key insights, especially from the literature on "equilibrium refinements" and on the theory of "second best." The government can correct spontaneous market dynamics in the health insurance market by directly subsidizing insurance or through regulation; the two forms of intervention provide different results. Providing partial public insurance, even supplemented by the possibility of opting out, can lead to second-best equilibria. The same result holds as long as the government can subsidize contracts with higher-than-average premium-benefit ratios and can tax contracts with lower-than-average premium-benefit ratios. The author analyzes the following policy options relating to the public provision of insurance: a) Full public insurance. b) Partial public insurance with or without the possibility of acquiring supplementary insurance and with or without the possibility of opting out. In recent plans implemented in Germany and the Netherlands, where competition among several health funds and insurance companies was promoted, a public fund was created to discourage risk screening practices by providing the necessary compensation across riks groups. But only "objective" risk adjusters (such as age, gender, and region) were used to decide which contracts to subsidize. Those criteria alone cannot correct the effects of adverse selection. Regulation can exacerbate the problem of adverse selection and lead to chronic market instability, so certain steps must be taken to prevent risk screening and preserve competition for the market. The author considers the following three policy options for regulating the private insurance market: 1) A standard contract with full coverage. 2) Imposition of a minimum insurance requirement. 3) Imposition of premium rate restrictions. 2014-08-26T18:32:40Z 2014-08-26T18:32:40Z 2001-03 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2001/03/1047509/adverse-selection-affects-health-insurance-market http://hdl.handle.net/10986/19694 English en_US Policy Research Working Paper;No. 2574 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper Publications & Research
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic AGENTS
ASYMMETRIC INFORMATION
AVERAGE COSTS
COMPENSATION
COMPETITIVE MARKETS
COMPULSORY INSURANCE
CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK
CROSS SUBSIDIZATION
ECONOMICS
EQUILIBRIUM
FREE ENTRY
HEALTH CARE
HEALTH CONDITIONS
HEALTH INSURANCE
HEALTH INSURANCE COVERAGE
HEALTH INSURERS
HEALTH NEEDS
HEALTH STATUS
IMPERFECT INFORMATION
INCOME
INDEMNITY
INSURANCE COMPANIES
INSURANCE CONTRACTS
INSURANCE MARKETS
INSURANCE OPTIONS
INSURANCE PLANS
INSURANCE SYSTEMS
MARGINAL COST
MARGINAL COSTS
MARKET EQUILIBRIUM
MARKET POWER
MEDICARE
MORAL HAZARD
PARETO OPTIMAL
PARTIAL INSURANCE
PERFECT INFORMATION
POLICY RESEARCH
PREMIUMS
PRIVATE INFORMATION
PRIVATE INSURANCE
PRIVATE SECTOR
PUBLIC HEALTH
PUBLIC INSURANCE
RISK ADJUSTERS
RISK AVERSION
SCALE ECONOMIES
SERVICE DELIVERY
SOCIAL WELFARE
STREAMS
TRANSACTION COSTS
WELFARE FUNCTION
spellingShingle AGENTS
ASYMMETRIC INFORMATION
AVERAGE COSTS
COMPENSATION
COMPETITIVE MARKETS
COMPULSORY INSURANCE
CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK
CROSS SUBSIDIZATION
ECONOMICS
EQUILIBRIUM
FREE ENTRY
HEALTH CARE
HEALTH CONDITIONS
HEALTH INSURANCE
HEALTH INSURANCE COVERAGE
HEALTH INSURERS
HEALTH NEEDS
HEALTH STATUS
IMPERFECT INFORMATION
INCOME
INDEMNITY
INSURANCE COMPANIES
INSURANCE CONTRACTS
INSURANCE MARKETS
INSURANCE OPTIONS
INSURANCE PLANS
INSURANCE SYSTEMS
MARGINAL COST
MARGINAL COSTS
MARKET EQUILIBRIUM
MARKET POWER
MEDICARE
MORAL HAZARD
PARETO OPTIMAL
PARTIAL INSURANCE
PERFECT INFORMATION
POLICY RESEARCH
PREMIUMS
PRIVATE INFORMATION
PRIVATE INSURANCE
PRIVATE SECTOR
PUBLIC HEALTH
PUBLIC INSURANCE
RISK ADJUSTERS
RISK AVERSION
SCALE ECONOMIES
SERVICE DELIVERY
SOCIAL WELFARE
STREAMS
TRANSACTION COSTS
WELFARE FUNCTION
Belli, Paolo
How Adverse Selection Affects the Health Insurance Market
relation Policy Research Working Paper;No. 2574
description Adverse selection can be defined as strategic behavior by the more informed partner in a contract against the interest of the less informed partner(s). In the health insurance field, this manifests itself through healthy people choosing managed care and less healthy people choosing more generous plans. Drawing on theoretical literature on the problem of adverse selection in the health insurance market, the author synthesizes concepts developed piecemeal over more than 20 years, using two examples and revisiting the classical contribution of Rothschild and Stiglitz. He highlights key insights, especially from the literature on "equilibrium refinements" and on the theory of "second best." The government can correct spontaneous market dynamics in the health insurance market by directly subsidizing insurance or through regulation; the two forms of intervention provide different results. Providing partial public insurance, even supplemented by the possibility of opting out, can lead to second-best equilibria. The same result holds as long as the government can subsidize contracts with higher-than-average premium-benefit ratios and can tax contracts with lower-than-average premium-benefit ratios. The author analyzes the following policy options relating to the public provision of insurance: a) Full public insurance. b) Partial public insurance with or without the possibility of acquiring supplementary insurance and with or without the possibility of opting out. In recent plans implemented in Germany and the Netherlands, where competition among several health funds and insurance companies was promoted, a public fund was created to discourage risk screening practices by providing the necessary compensation across riks groups. But only "objective" risk adjusters (such as age, gender, and region) were used to decide which contracts to subsidize. Those criteria alone cannot correct the effects of adverse selection. Regulation can exacerbate the problem of adverse selection and lead to chronic market instability, so certain steps must be taken to prevent risk screening and preserve competition for the market. The author considers the following three policy options for regulating the private insurance market: 1) A standard contract with full coverage. 2) Imposition of a minimum insurance requirement. 3) Imposition of premium rate restrictions.
format Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper
author Belli, Paolo
author_facet Belli, Paolo
author_sort Belli, Paolo
title How Adverse Selection Affects the Health Insurance Market
title_short How Adverse Selection Affects the Health Insurance Market
title_full How Adverse Selection Affects the Health Insurance Market
title_fullStr How Adverse Selection Affects the Health Insurance Market
title_full_unstemmed How Adverse Selection Affects the Health Insurance Market
title_sort how adverse selection affects the health insurance market
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2014
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2001/03/1047509/adverse-selection-affects-health-insurance-market
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/19694
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