Microeconomics (7th Edition)
7th Edition
ISBN: 9780134737508
Author: R. Glenn Hubbard, Anthony Patrick O'Brien
Publisher: PEARSON
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Chapter 7, Problem 7.1CTE
To determine
Employment-based health insurance.
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Julia is a 28- year-old nonsmoking , non-drinking female of normal weight Because of adverse selection in health insurance , (A) She will be charged less for her premiums than people who are higher risks ) B)She is less likely to buy health insurance than the average person, because policy premiums are based on expected medical expenditures of people who are less healthy than she is ( C) When she get health insurance , she will be less likely to take care of herself. ) D)She must get health insurance early in life, and is likely to lose health insurance if she smokes , drinks to excess, or gains weight. E) She is more likely than the average person to buy health insurance , because she is more likely to be offered it.
Draw a graph and an argument about how increases in health due to one medical innovation can lead to improvements in health that are not directly affected by that innovation. Does it matter the demographic properties of those individuals whose health is improved by the initial innovation?
In the mid-1990s, the state of New Jersey revised its rules for the individual insurance market and began requiring that insurers charge the same premiums for the same coverage to all applicants. Assuming that insurers had previously used medical underwriting, which of the following is a predictable consequence of adverse selection?
1)
Insurance becomes less attractive to the healthiest individuals, so fewer of them buy it
2)
Insurers’ average costs of providing coverage increase because of a changing risk pool
3)
The average age of those buying in the individual market goes up
4)
All of the above
Chapter 7 Solutions
Microeconomics (7th Edition)
Ch. 7 - Prob. 7.1.1RQCh. 7 - Prob. 7.1.2RQCh. 7 - Prob. 7.1.3RQCh. 7 - Prob. 7.1.4PACh. 7 - Prob. 7.1.5PACh. 7 - Prob. 7.1.6PACh. 7 - Prob. 7.2.1RQCh. 7 - Prob. 7.2.2RQCh. 7 - Prob. 7.2.3RQCh. 7 - Prob. 7.2.4RQ
Ch. 7 - Prob. 7.2.5PACh. 7 - Prob. 7.2.6PACh. 7 - Prob. 7.2.7PACh. 7 - Prob. 7.2.8PACh. 7 - Prob. 7.2.9PACh. 7 - Prob. 7.3.1RQCh. 7 - Prob. 7.3.2RQCh. 7 - Prob. 7.3.3RQCh. 7 - Prob. 7.3.4RQCh. 7 - Prob. 7.3.5PACh. 7 - Prob. 7.3.6PACh. 7 - Prob. 7.3.7PACh. 7 - Prob. 7.3.8PACh. 7 - Prob. 7.3.9PACh. 7 - Prob. 7.3.10PACh. 7 - Prob. 7.3.11PACh. 7 - Prob. 7.3.12PACh. 7 - Prob. 7.3.13PACh. 7 - Prob. 7.3.14PACh. 7 - Prob. 7.3.15PACh. 7 - Prob. 7.4.1RQCh. 7 - Prob. 7.4.2RQCh. 7 - Prob. 7.4.3RQCh. 7 - Prob. 7.4.4RQCh. 7 - Prob. 7.4.5RQCh. 7 - Prob. 7.4.6PACh. 7 - Prob. 7.4.7PACh. 7 - Prob. 7.4.8PACh. 7 - Prob. 7.4.9PACh. 7 - Prob. 7.4.10PACh. 7 - Prob. 7.4.11PACh. 7 - Prob. 7.4.12PACh. 7 - Prob. 7.4.13PACh. 7 - Prob. 7.4.14PACh. 7 - Prob. 7.1CTE
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- The figure shows estimated medical costs versus what a user actually pays for three health insurance plans with different deductibles. For which plan does the user pay the least for estimated medical costs of $4,000? **SEE DIAGRAM** $500 deductible plan $1,000 deductible plan $2,000 deductible plan The user pays the same for all three plans.arrow_forwardQ73 Adverse selection is... a. Asking a private pilot about the safety of his plane. b. Purchasing more dental insurance when you know your teeth are especially bad. c. Purchasing the required homeowner's insurance when you buy a condo. d. Asking a doctor if you are sick. e. Asking your lawyer if you should sue your doctor for malpractice.arrow_forwardSuppose that the graph below illustrates the demand for healthcare services given a coinsurance plan of 25%, what would be the expected change if the participant changed jobs and received a plan with 100% coinsurance?arrow_forward
- 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_forwardWhich statement about health insurance in the US is false? Question options: 1) Going back to 1940, only about 10 percent of the US population had any health insurance 2) The share of the under-65 population with private health insurance rose until the 1970s and then plateaued—it remained virtually constant until the implementation of the Affordable Care Act 3) Early on, the health insurance market was dominated by Blue Cross plans, which practiced community rating in setting premiums 4) Measured in percentage points, the drop in the uninsured rate in the nonelderly population between 2013 and 2016 was larger than the increase in the share with private insurancearrow_forwardMultiple Choice Adverse selection describes a situation where an individual's demand for insurance is positively correlated with the individual's risk of loss. Adverse selection occurs when someone increases their exposure to risk when insured. This can happen, for example, when a person takes more risks because someone else bears the cost of those risks. The relationship between smoking status and mortality provides a good illustration for adverse selection, especially in the case in which a life insurance company did not vary its premiums according to smoking status of its customers. To counter the effects of adverse selection, insurers may offer premiums that are proportional to a customer's risk.arrow_forward
- It was felt that liability insurance would undermine the tort system, which has as its central theorem the concept that the individual responsible for injuring another should be made to pay for that injury. Do you think the existence of liability insurance causes one to be less careful than he or she might otherwise be?arrow_forwardApproximately __________ million Americans are without health insurance.arrow_forwardWhich option is the most effective for companies and employees: a standard fee-for-services health care insurance option or a high-deductible health insurance plan.arrow_forward
- Even though the total cost of an uninsured hospital stay is lower, why would an uninsured person actually end up paying more than those with insurance?arrow_forwardTrue or false 1. A perceived disadvantage of Rawls's social justice theory is that it does not consider the fact that people would not want to maximize benefits for the least advantaged persons 2. Ethical relativism is a moral theory which holds that individuals must decide what is ethical based on their own feelings about what is right and wrong. 3. Utilitarianism is a moral theory that chooses the greatest good to society but does not mean the greatest good for the greatest number of people. 4. According to Rawls's “social justice” theory, a person who is in a state of "veil of ignorance" is best fit to select the fairest possible ethical principles. Please help, & thank you!arrow_forwardWhich of the following statements is FALSE regarding the concept of "adverse selection"? Multiple Choice Adverse selection describes a situation where an individual's demand for insurance is positively correlated with the individual's risk of loss. Adverse selection occurs when someone increases their exposure to risk when insured. This can happen, for example, when a person takes more risks because someone else bears the cost of those risks. The relationship between smoking status and mortality provides a good illustration for adverse selection, especially in the case in which a life insurance company did not vary its premiums according to smoking status of its customers. To counter the effects of adverse selection, insurers may offer premiums that are proportional to a customer's risk.arrow_forward
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