MICROECONOMICS(LL)COMPANION
21st Edition
ISBN: 9781260713541
Author: McConnell
Publisher: MCG
expand_more
expand_more
format_list_bulleted
Question
Chapter 4.A, Problem 1ADQ
To determine
Asymmetric information and insurance price.
Expert Solution & Answer
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solutionStudents have asked these similar questions
A group of 200 people seek out an insurance company to underwrite health insurance for its members. It expected
medical spending for the group is $1,200,000, what will the average premium bn If the health insurance company
adds a leading fee of 20 percent?
$14,400
$12,000
O $7,200
O $6,000
Suppose that the price elasticity for hip replacement surgeries is 0.2. Further suppose that hip replacement surgeries are originally not covered by health insurance and that at a price of $50,000 each, 10,000 such surgeries are demanded each year. LO24.2 a. Suppose that health insurance begins to cover hip replacement surgeries and that everyone interested in getting a hip replacement has health insurance. If insurance covers 50 percent of the cost of the surgery, by what percentage would you expect the quantity demanded of hip replacements to increase? What if insurance covered 90 percent of the price? If insurance covers 50 percent of the bill, just assume that the price paid by consumers falls 50 percent.) b. Suppose that with insurance companies covering 90 percent of the price, the increase in demand leads to a jump in the price per hip surgery from $50,000 to $100,000. How much will each insured patient now pay for a hip replacement surgery? Compared to the original situation,…
In 2017, health care spending in the US accounted for approximately of the GDP.
O 5%
17%
25%
38%
45%
QUESTION 2
Without any change to the health insurance system, by 2082, health care spending in the US is expected to reach
5%
18%
25%
49%
QUESTION 3
The main reason why health care spending is increasing over time is
O Increasing administrative costs
Increasing uncompensated care
O population aging
increase in sophistication and quality of medical services
the Affordable Care Act
QUESTION 4
Regarding health insurance, the number of uninsured individuals in the US is approximately
8 million
18 million.
28 million
48 million
98 million
of the GDP.
Chapter 4 Solutions
MICROECONOMICS(LL)COMPANION
Ch. 4.A - Prob. 1ADQCh. 4.A - Prob. 2ADQCh. 4.A - Prob. 3ADQCh. 4.A - Prob. 1ARQCh. 4.A - Prob. 2ARQCh. 4.A - Prob. 3ARQCh. 4.A - Prob. 1APCh. 4 - Prob. 1DQCh. 4 - Prob. 2DQCh. 4 - Prob. 3DQ
Ch. 4 - Prob. 4DQCh. 4 - Prob. 5DQCh. 4 - Prob. 6DQCh. 4 - Prob. 7DQCh. 4 - Prob. 8DQCh. 4 - Prob. 9DQCh. 4 - Prob. 1RQCh. 4 - Prob. 2RQCh. 4 - Prob. 3RQCh. 4 - Prob. 4RQCh. 4 - Prob. 5RQCh. 4 - Prob. 6RQCh. 4 - Prob. 7RQCh. 4 - Prob. 1PCh. 4 - Prob. 2PCh. 4 - Prob. 3PCh. 4 - Prob. 4PCh. 4 - Prob. 5PCh. 4 - Prob. 6PCh. 4 - Prob. 7P
Knowledge Booster
Similar questions
- Suppose that one course of treatment costs $500,000. If given to patient A, it will increase life expectancy by one month; for patient B, by two months; for patient C, by three months; and for patient D, by four months. The marginal cost per additional year of life for the patient most likely to benefit is and the marginal cost per additional year of life for the patient least likely to benefit is O $500,000; $2 million $1.5 million; $6 million $200,000; $500,000 O $2 million; $500,000 $6 million; $1.5 millionarrow_forward2. Suppose the equilibrium price for an average hospital stay in the absence of insurance is S10,000. At that price, 1000 people are hospitalized each year. Now suppose an insurer offers a policy to lower the out of pocket price of a stay to S100, and at that price, 1200 pcople are hospitalized. How much TOTAL premium revenue must be collected to finance this arrangement? HINT: you arc trying to brcak even here to get revenucs to match costs. You are given information that indicates cost. Now you need to consider revenues to balance that out. Keep in mind this is asking about premium revenue. There may be other revenue that you are receiving that you should consider when trying to calculate premium revenue to get to break even. a.arrow_forwardSusan was frustrated. As chair of the school of nursing at the local university, she wantedher students to get used to using electronic health records. Ideally, these students wouldleave her program and be able to use their employer’s EHR system without any additionalorientation. Other campus health profession leaders had similar concerns. However, thefaculty found that within a 100-mile radius of the university, the area’s many hospitals andthree main healthcare systems all used different EHR vendors.The local healthcare systems promoted electronic health information. They were allconcerned about the safety and security of the records and the needs of their patients. Theywere also aware of the national push for system to integrate EHRs. In reality, however, therecords housed in the variety of systems could not be shared. The software was toodisconnected and dissimilar.Susan wondered what her next step should be. Which system should she adopt, ifany? How could she help move these…arrow_forward
- Assume that health insurance is private in a country, and the market for insurance is competitive. The figure below shows the marginal benefit and willingness and ability to pay curve. Premium (thousands of dollars per year) 30 million. 40 million. 10 million. 20 million. 12 O 10 CO 6 2 O 10 D = MB 50 20 30 40 Quantity (millions of families insured) Suppose that the marginal social benefit of insurance exceeds the willingness and ability to pay by a constant $2,000 per family per year. Suppose the marginal cost of health insurance is a constant $8,000 a year. What is the efficient quantity of health insurance policies?arrow_forward12. True or False? Medicaid is a U.S. federal- and state- government-sponsored insurance program that provides insurance to people under age 65 whose incomes fall below a certain threshold (level). O True O Falsearrow_forward/Suppose that an individual's demand curve for doc-tor visits per year is given by the equation P = 100- 25Q, where Q is the number of doctor visits peryear and P is the price per visit. Suppose also thatthe marginal cost of each doctor visit is $50.a. How many visits per year would be efficient?What is the total cost of the efficient numberof visits?b. Suppose that the individual obtains insur-ance. There is no deductible, and the coin-surance rate is 50 percent. How many visitsto the doctor will occur now? What are theindividual's out-of-pocket costs? How muchdoes the insurance company pay for this individual's doctors' visits?c. What is the deadweight loss (if any) causedby this insurance policy?arrow_forward
- Suppose you are a politician being criticized in a debate for your commitment to reducing the growth of medical spending. Which of the following is the most appropriate response? O a. There is empirical evidence that medical spending should be capped at 15 percent of GDP. O b. Reducing wasteful health care spending could provide additional funding to the education sector. O c. High health care spending is harmful to bur economic well-being. O d. Fixing treatment prices will lead to greater innovation. Oe. Other developed nations spend far less of their GDP on health care.arrow_forwardla. Suppose a particular population has two kinds of health risks, high and low. Let the expected annual health care costs for the high risk be $10,000, and for the low risk, half that. If there are twice as many low risk as high risk individuals, and if the one insurer's administrative load is 20%, what would the community rated premium be if everyone is compelled to and able to buy health insurance? Note: administrative load can be construed as the amount that the insurer has in costs to run the plans above and beyond the "health care costs." a. $7500 b. $6000 c. $12,000 d. $8000 2a. Now suppose insurance rules are changed to permit a new insurer (B) to enter this marketplace and be allowed to exclude the high risk due to pre-existing condition exclusions while the other incumbent insurer (A) is forced to still charge a community rate (as in the ACA). Assuming loads remain at 20% in long run equilibrium, what would the premiums be in each market, (low risk, high risk)? a. $5000,…arrow_forward8. A health system wants to determine where it should locate new outpatient clinics in the Columbus metro area, and how many it should open. If it takes a pure market-based approach, what main factors will it consider in this decision? O a) Where the greatest areas of unmet need for outpatient services are located; the extent of this need; the accessibility of various locations to through public transportation; and the availability of these locations to the population in need (i.e. hours convenient with work schedules). Ob) Where the population covered by its health plan lives; likely revenues vs. costs for clinics in different locations; the likely usage of the clinics by the covered population (i.e., will this increase their use of outpatient services); the convenience of use, and whether/to what extent a new clinic take away patients from another existing outpatient clinic vs. providing services that enable the plan to expand its pool of insured patients & compete with other area…arrow_forward
- 5 Suppose that a person’s demand curve for physician office visits is P = 200 – 20Q, where P is the price of an office visit, and Q is the number of physician visits per year. Also, suppose that the marginal cost of an office visit is always $60. c. Suppose this person obtains health insurance. The policy has no deductible, but has a coinsurance rate of 50 percent. How many visits will occur now? d. Suppose that the policy has no deductible but has a $20 co-payment. How many visits will occur now? e. Suppose the policy has a $20 co-payment and a $500 deductible. How many visits will occur now? f. Calculate the deadweight losses in the policies described in parts c, d, and e.arrow_forward-Ben has named Jerry as primary beneficiary of Ben's life insurance policy and Tom as the contingent beneficiary. In which of the following ways do the rights of Jerry differ from the rights of Tom? - -If Jerry is living when Ben dies, Tom has no legal right to any of the life insurance lump-sum death proceeds. -The only circumstances under which Tom would have any legal right to the lump-sum death proceeds would be if Jerry predeceases Ben. -a.1 Only -b.2 Only -c.Both 1 and 2arrow_forwardJackie moved to Spain to work for a public relations firm. She had health insurance from herprevious employer, but she was surprised to learn that her new employer in Spain did notoffer healthcare coverage. When she asked about this, she was told that more than 90percent of Spaniards use the public healthcare system, which was mostly free. However,her new employer did provide supplementary private health insurance that would allow herto receive quicker care from a private hospital if she desired.Jackie learned that she would be paying 4.7 percent of her salary and her employerwould pay 23.6 percent of her salary to the government for health insurance. She was given a Tarjeta Sanitaria Individual health card to prove that she had health insurance. With this,she could get free care at public hospitals and doctors’ offices. However, before seeing adoctor, she would need to register with a local primary care physician and decide whethershe would use public or private payment. If she needed…arrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- Principles of Economics 2eEconomicsISBN:9781947172364Author:Steven A. Greenlaw; David ShapiroPublisher:OpenStaxPrinciples of Economics, 7th Edition (MindTap Cou...EconomicsISBN:9781285165875Author:N. Gregory MankiwPublisher:Cengage Learning
Principles of Economics 2e
Economics
ISBN:9781947172364
Author:Steven A. Greenlaw; David Shapiro
Publisher:OpenStax
Principles of Economics, 7th Edition (MindTap Cou...
Economics
ISBN:9781285165875
Author:N. Gregory Mankiw
Publisher:Cengage Learning