Health Economics
14th Edition
ISBN: 9781137029966
Author: Jay Bhattacharya
Publisher: SPRINGER NATURE CUSTOMER SERVICE
expand_more
expand_more
format_list_bulleted
Question
Chapter 5, Problem 8E
To determine
Expert Solution & Answer
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solutionStudents have asked these similar questions
Indicate whether the statement is true or false, and justify your answer.The fact that practicing surgeons who have finished residency earn more than practicing pediatricians implies that the rate of return of choosing surgery exceeds the rate of return of choosing pediatrics for a medical school graduate.
The fact that most medical care purchases are financed through insurance:
a. has no effect on health care consumption because aggregate costs are the same regardless of payment method.
b. reduces the amount of health care consumed by raising the price of additional units of care.
c.has decreased health care costs and therefore reduced aggregate health care expenditures.
d. increases the amount of health care consumed by reducing the price of additional units of care.
Which of the following is NOT true?
Group of answer choices
On average, most costs of medical school are covered by student tuition
Most who get accepted into a medical school attend one.
Most who attend medical school graduate
Most who graduate medical school go into a residency program
Knowledge Booster
Similar questions
- The following is an excerpt from "The Labor Market Effects of Rising Health Insurance Premiums," by Katherine Baicker, Amitabh Chandra. If workers in a certain sector of the economy or those who are married are systematically more likely to have different levels of unobservable characteristics that affect health insurance premiums, then such a correlation is possible. This problem is identical to the standard endogeneity problem in program evaluation, where receipt of the treatment is correlated with unobservable characteristics of the person receiving treatment. A solution to this problem is to instrument for imputed premiums using variables that are uncorrelated with εi and mi but are correlated with imputed health insurance premiums. In our analysis we use state‐level, per‐capita medical malpractice payments as an instrument for imputed premiums. In other words, in order for malpractice payments to be a valid instrument for health insurance premiums, it must be the case that…arrow_forwardInsurance coverage has been shown to diminish the importance of time in the decision about how much medical care to seek and which providers to use. True OR Falsearrow_forwardHow can the New York sick leave law impact the use of emergency rooms? Reference the Grossman model for guidance.arrow_forward
- The stated premise behind the production function for health is that medical care, when combined with other inputs and a person's own time, produces good health. What is the marginal contribution of medical care to the production of health in the United States? Will spending more money on medical care improve the health of Americans, or is there another strategy that would work better? How would your answer change if you were studying health in a less-developed country?arrow_forwardAccording to Gaynor, Laudicella, and Propper (2011), Can you think of reasons why hospital mergers might lead to improvements in the quality of care for a given level of inputs (which is one measure of hospital productivity)? Learning by doing may be facilitated by hospital mergers. Large hospitals can achieve more specialization and consequently their costs of care may be lower.arrow_forwardWhich statement about the individual health insurance market in the U.S. is correct? Question options: 1) Among the non-elderly with private health insurance, about one-third now purchase it in the individual market 2) Individual market enrollment increased with implementation of the Affordable Care Act in 2014, but it has declined in every year since 3) According to data from the Kaiser Family Foundation, On-Exchange enrollment has been roughly constant (varied by less than 1 million) since 2015 4) According to data from the Kaiser Family Foundation, Off-Exchange enrollment has grown relative to On-Exchange since 2015arrow_forward
- Employer-provided private health insurance in the United States has resulted in: A. incentives that encourage the overuse of health care.B. incentives that discourage the use of health care, and overall poorer health.C. lower costs of health care as providers better achieve economies of scale.D. comprehensive coverage of the U.S. population, with few lacking access to adequate health care.arrow_forwardIn the early 2000s, the state of Massachusetts in the U.S. implemented a health reform aimed at enrolling people without health insurance into an insurance plan. The reform required people without health insurance (at least those who could afford it) to buy insurance, and put in place penalties on those who nevertheless chose not to buy insurance. Below is the abstract of a recent National Bureau of Economic Research working paper entitled “Health Reform, Health Insurance, and Selection: Estimating Selection into Health Insurance Using the Massachusetts Health Reform” by Martin Hackmann, Jonathan Kolstad, and Amanda Kowalski. The authors conducted a study of the effects of the Massachusetts reform. They write: We implement an empirical test for selection into health insurance using changes in coverage induced by the introduction of mandated health insurance in Massachusetts. Our test examines changes in the cost of the newly insured relative to those who were insured prior to the…arrow_forwardWhile it may seem intuitively obvious that health expenditures will increase as a population ages – older people after all are less healthy on average than younger people in fact, several prominent health economists have argued that it is not aging per se, but rather some of the correlates of an aging population that cause health expenditures to rise as a population ages. For instance, Getzen (1992) argues that, at least in part, rising health expenditures with an aging population are due to the higher incomes and resources of the older population; health care is a normal good, so higher incomes lead to higher expenditures. In a similar manner, Zweifel et al. (1999) argue that the real problem with an aging population, at least as far as health care costs are concerned, is that there will be more people who are within a couple of years of dying. Since health care expenditures rise sharply close to the end of life, it is this, rather than population aging by itself, that leads to higher…arrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- Exploring EconomicsEconomicsISBN:9781544336329Author:Robert L. SextonPublisher:SAGE Publications, Inc
Exploring Economics
Economics
ISBN:9781544336329
Author:Robert L. Sexton
Publisher:SAGE Publications, Inc