The Samaritan’s Dilemma and public health insurance
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Sepulveda, Facundo
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Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR), Research School of Social Sciences, The Australian National University
Abstract
When the government cannot commit to withdraw from providing charity
health care, as is the case when it faces the Samaritan's Dilemma, a public health insurance scheme can be Pareto improving. However, the large
heterogeneity in the design of such schemes observed around the world begs
the question of what characterizes the optimal public health insurance plan.
In this paper, we examine the distortions created by three plans, nested
in terms of the constraints they place on the individual's decision problem.
We find that linking public health insurance benefits to the use of a certain
type of health care, such as treatment in public hospitals, creates incentives
against the efficient use of higher quality health care. When such constraint
is lifted, but the public insurance scheme still determines a minimum level
of coverage for each illness, first best efficiency is achieved. It turns out
that placing constraints in the form of minimum levels of coverage for each
illness is necessary for e±ciency. Removing such constraint decreases the
relative price of high quality care for a subset of illnesses, and leads to too
much high quality care used in equilibrium. This analysis suggests that the
widespread practice of determining illness by illness coverage in public health
insurance systems has an efficiency rationale, despite the administrative and
informational difficulties that it entails.
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