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Journal article

Public and private health‐care financing with alternate public rationing rules

Abstract

We develop a model to analyze parallel public and private health-care financing under two alternative public sector rationing rules: needs-based rationing and random rationing. Individuals vary in income and severity of illness. There is a limited supply of health-care resources used to treat individuals, causing some individuals to go untreated. Insurers (both public and private) must bid to obtain the necessary health-care resources to treat their beneficiaries. Given individuals' willingnesses-to-pay for private insurance are increasing in income, the introduction of private insurance diverts treatment from relatively poor to relatively rich individuals. Further, the impact of introducing parallel private insurance depends on the rationing mechanism in the public sector. We show that the private health insurance market is smaller when the public sector rations according to need than when allocation is random.

Authors

Cuff K; Hurley J; Mestelman S; Muller A; Nuscheler R

Journal

Health Economics, Vol. 21, No. 2, pp. 83–100

Publisher

Wiley

Publication Date

February 1, 2012

DOI

10.1002/hec.1698

ISSN

1057-9230

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