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Book The Labor Market Effects of Rising Health Insurance Premiums

Download or read book The Labor Market Effects of Rising Health Insurance Premiums written by Katherine Baicker and published by . This book was released on 2005 with total page 28 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Since 2000, premiums for employer-provided health insurance have increased by 59 percent with little corresponding increase in the generosity of coverage. The effect of this increase in costs on wages and employment will depend on workers' valuation of the benefit, the elasticities of labor supply and demand, and institutional constraints on employers' ability to lower wages. Measuring these effects is difficult, however, without a source of exogenous variation in the cost of benefits. We use variation in medical malpractice payments driven by the recent "medical malpractice crisis" to identify the causal effect of rising health insurance premiums on wages, employment, and health insurance coverage. We estimate that a 10 percent increase in health insurance premiums reduces the aggregate probability of being employed by 1.6 percent and hours worked by 1 percent, and increases the likelihood that a worker is employed only part-time by 1.9 percent. For workers covered by employer provided health insurance, this increase in premiums results in an offsetting decrease in wages of 2.3 percent. Thus, rising health insurance premiums may both increase the ranks of the unemployed and place an increasing burden on workers through decreased wages for workers with employer health insurance and decreased hours for workers moved from full time jobs with benefits to part time jobs without.

Book The Effects of Employer Sponsored Health Insurance Premiums on Employment and Wages

Download or read book The Effects of Employer Sponsored Health Insurance Premiums on Employment and Wages written by Nicola Ciccarelli and published by . This book was released on 2020 with total page 0 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: We analyze the effect of employer-sponsored health insurance premiums on employment and annual wages in the US using a county-level panel dataset for the period 2005-2010. Using variation in medical malpractice payments and variation in medical malpractice legislation over time and within states as the source of identifying variation in the health insurance premiums, we estimate the causal effects of rising health insurance premiums on employment and annual wages. We find that a 10% increase in premiums reduces employment by 1.1 percentage points, and leads to a statistically insignificant reduction of annual wages. Since US counties are characterized by a varying degree of private health insurance coverage, we also test whether the private health insurance coverage is a moderating variable for the relationship between the health insurance premiums and the labor market outcomes analyzed in this study. We find that rising premiums negatively affect the labor market conditions faced by US workers, especially in areas that are characterized by high private health insurance coverage.

Book Labor Market Responses to Rising Health Insurance Costs

Download or read book Labor Market Responses to Rising Health Insurance Costs written by David M. Cutler and published by . This book was released on 1996 with total page 56 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Increases in the cost of providing health insurance must have some effect on labor markets, either in lower wages, changes in the composition of employment, or both. Despite a presumption that most of this effect will be in the form of lower wages, we document in this paper a significant effect on work hours as well. Using data from the CPS and the SIPP, we show that rising health insurance costs over the 1980s increased the hours worked of those with health insurance by up to 3 percent. We argue that this occurs because health insurance is a fixed cost, and as it becomes more expensive to provide, firms face an incentive to substitute hours per worker for the number of workers employed.

Book Rising Health Care Costs

Download or read book Rising Health Care Costs written by and published by . This book was released on 2009 with total page 27 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: The strong link between employment and health insurance in the U.S. means that ever rising health care costs may have serious consequences for labor market outcomes such as job creation, employment flows, earnings, and hours of work. In this paper, we analyze the effect of health care costs on these employment outcomes, using a dataset compiled to address these issues at the MSA level. Some caution in interpretation is necessary here due to the imprecision of the estimates but overall we argue that the patterns we find suggest a negative effect on employment, with the impact occurring mostly through reductions in new hires. There is also some evidence that workers are not leaving jobs with higher health insurance premiums which may support the job-lock hypothesis. Last, we find significant and negative effects of higher costs on hours of work, illustrating that the link between health insurance and employment can affect workers along many dimensions.

Book Labor Market Implications of Employer Provided Health Insurance

Download or read book Labor Market Implications of Employer Provided Health Insurance written by Kanika Kapur and published by . This book was released on 1997 with total page 211 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Second, small firms that offer health insurance may attempt to avoid expensive premium variability by maintaining a work force with low expected health costs. Using the NMES, I find small firms that offer health insurance are less like to hire and more likely to layoff workers with families that have medical conditions that lead to higher health insurance premiums. These results suggest that the link between small firm health insurance and employment leads to employment distortions.

Book Health Benefits at Work

Download or read book Health Benefits at Work written by Mark V. Pauly and published by University of Michigan Press. This book was released on 1999-06-04 with total page 204 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Who really pays for health benefits? An accessible explanation of the economic theory behind this question

Book Labor Market Effects of Employment based Health Insurance

Download or read book Labor Market Effects of Employment based Health Insurance written by Brigette Condie Madrian and published by . This book was released on 1993 with total page 448 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Health Insurance and the Labor Market

Download or read book Health Insurance and the Labor Market written by Jonathan Gruber and published by . This book was released on 1998 with total page 106 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: A distinctive feature of the health insurance market in the U.S. is the restriction of group insurance availability to the workplace. This has a number of important implications for the functioning of the labor market, through mobility from job-to-job or in and out of the labor force, wage determination, and hiring decisions. This paper reviews the large literature that has emerged in recent years to assess the impact of health insurance on the labor market. I begin with an overview of the institutional details relevant to assessing the interaction of health insurance and the labor market. I then present a theoretical overview of the effects of health insurance on mobility and wage/employment determination. I critically review the empirical literature on these topics, focusing in particular on the methodological issues that have been raised, and highlighting the unanswered questions which can be the focus of future work in this area.

Book Effects of Changes to the Health Insurance System on Labor Markets

Download or read book Effects of Changes to the Health Insurance System on Labor Markets written by Janet Holtzblatt and published by DIANE Publishing. This book was released on 2010-10 with total page 8 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: In the U.S., health insurance (HI) coverage is linked to employment in ways that can affect both wages and the demand for certain types of workers. That close linkage can also affect people¿s decisions to enter the labor force, to work fewer or more hours, to retire, and even to work in one particular job or another. This economic brief shows that the overall impact on labor markets (LM) is difficult to predict. Although economic theory and experience provide some guidance as to the effect of specific provisions, large-scale changes to the HI system could have more extensive repercussions than have previously been observed and also may involve numerous factors that would interact ¿ affecting LM in potentially offsetting ways.

Book Expanding the Employer provided Health Insurance System

Download or read book Expanding the Employer provided Health Insurance System written by Sheila R. Zedlewski and published by The Urban Insitute. This book was released on 1991 with total page 116 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Economic Implications of Rising Health Care Costs

Download or read book Economic Implications of Rising Health Care Costs written by and published by DIANE Publishing. This book was released on 1992-10 with total page 76 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Examines the effects of rising health care costs on the economy. In particular, it examines how the costs affect workers, businesses and governments. Chapters: special characteristics of health care markets; what has caused the rapid increase in health expenditures; the economic effects of rising costs for employer-provided insurance and how the rising costs for government health programs affect the economy. 21 charts and tables.

Book Rising Health Insurance Costs  Declining Benefits  and Metro nonmetro and Firm Size Compensation Gaps

Download or read book Rising Health Insurance Costs Declining Benefits and Metro nonmetro and Firm Size Compensation Gaps written by Anna Kincaid Stende and published by . This book was released on 2005 with total page 206 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This study analyzes the impact of rising health insurance costs and changing tax rates on wages and health insurance benefits. The study also investigates the underlying reasons for large metro-nonmetro and firm size gaps in wages and health insurance benefits. The cost of firm-provided health insurance net of inflation rose 104% from 1987 to 2002. This trend should increase the likelihood that firms will reduce their contribution to health insurance benefits or drop them altogether. Over that same period, significant variation in the average marginal tax rate occurred in a number of states. Higher tax rates should raise the cost of compensation in the form of wages relative to benefits because benefits typically are untaxed. Consistent with these two hypotheses, empirical results show that both insurance costs and taxes have a significant impact on health insurance benefits and wages. The combined effects of the changes in health insurance costs and taxes was a 4.6% reduction in the probability of firm-provided health insurance coverage, an 18.2% reduction in average employer contributions to health insurance, and a 17.9% increase in wages as employers shifted compensation from providing benefits to wages. Workers residing in nonmetro areas have less generous health insurance benefits and receive lower wages than workers residing in metro areas. Similarly, individuals working for smaller firms have less generous benefits and wages than individuals working for larger firms. Although health insurance costs and taxes have significant effects on benefits and wages, they explain little of the metro-nonmetro and firm size gaps. Consequently, equalizing health insurance premiums will have very little impact on the proportion of workers covered by employer-provided health insurance in small firms or in nonmetro areas. Differences in the education level of workers explain the largest portion of both the metro-nonmetro and firm size compensation gaps. The higher incidence of nonmetro residents employed by the smallest firms also explains a large portion of the metro-nonmetro gap. Other variables explaining the firm size gap include the lower incidence of workers employed full-time in small firms and local labor market conditions.

Book Three Essays on Health Insurance Regulation and the Labor Market

Download or read book Three Essays on Health Insurance Regulation and the Labor Market written by James Bailey and published by . This book was released on 2014 with total page 84 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This dissertation continues the tradition of identifying the unintended consequences of the US health insurance system. Its main contribution is to estimate the size of the distortions caused by the employer-based system and regulations intended to fix it, while using methods that are more novel and appropriate than those of previous work. Chapter 1 examines the effect of state-level health insurance mandates, which are regulations intended to expand access to health insurance. It finds that these regulations have the unintended consequence of increasing insurance premiums, and that these regulations have been responsible for 9-23% of premium increases since 1996. The main contribution of the chapter is that its results are more general than previous work, since it considers many more years of data, and it studies the employer-based plans that cover most Americans rather than the much less common individual plans. Whereas Chapter 1 estimates the effect of the average mandate on premiums, Chapter 2 focuses on a specific mandate, one that requires insurers to cover prostate cancer screenings. The focus on a single mandate allows a broader and more careful analysis that demonstrates how health policies spill over to affect the labor market. I find that the mandate has a significant negative effect on the labor market outcomes of the very group it was intended to help. The mandate expands the treatments health insurance covers for men over age 50, but by doing so it makes them more expensive to insure and employ. Employers respond to this added expense by lowering wages and hiring fewer men over age 50. According to the theoretical model put forward in the chapter, this suggests the mandate reduces total welfare. Chapter 3 shows that the employer-based health insurance system has deterred entrepreneurship. It takes advantage of the natural experiment provided by the Affordable Care Act's dependent coverage mandate, which de-linked insurance from employment for many 19-25 year olds. Difference-in-difference estimates show that the mandate increased self-employment among the treated group by 13-24%. Instrumental variables estimates show that those who actually received parental health insurance as a result of the mandate were drastically more likely to start their own business. This suggest that concerns over health insurance are a major barrier to entrepreneurship in the United States.

Book The Labor Market Effects of Employment based Health Insurance

Download or read book The Labor Market Effects of Employment based Health Insurance written by Marc N. Turenne and published by . This book was released on 2003 with total page 366 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book The Health Wedge and Labor Market Inequality

Download or read book The Health Wedge and Labor Market Inequality written by Amy Finkelstein and published by . This book was released on 2023 with total page 0 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Over half of the U.S. population receives health insurance through an employer, with employer premium contributions creating a flat "head tax" per worker, independent of their earnings. This paper develops and calibrates a stylized model of the labor market to explore how this uniquely American approach to financing health insurance contributes to labor market inequality. We consider a partial-equilibrium counterfactual in which employer-provided health insurance is instead financed by a statutory payroll tax on firms. We find that, under this counterfactual financing, in 2019 the college wage premium would have been 11 percent lower, non-college annual earnings would have been $1,700 (3 percent) higher, and non-college employment would have been nearly 500,000 higher. These calibrated labor market effects of switching from head-tax to payroll-tax financing are in the same ballpark as estimates of the impact of other leading drivers of labor market inequality, including changes in outsourcing, robot adoption, rising trade, unionization, and the real minimum wage. We also consider a separate partial-equilibrium counterfactual in which the current head-tax financing is maintained, but 2019 U.S. health care spending as a share of GDP is reduced to the Canadian share; here, we estimate that the 2019 college wage premium would have been 5 percent lower and non-college annual earnings would have been 5 percent higher. These findings suggest that health care costs and the financing of health insurance warrant greater attention in both public policy and research on U.S. labor market inequality.