HEALTH, HEALTH INSURANCE, AND INEQUALITY
Chaoran Chen, Zhigang Feng, Jiaying Gu
Abstract
Abstract This article identifies a “health premium” of insurance coverage: insured individuals are more likely to maintain good health or recover from poor health. We introduce this feature into a prototypical macrohealth model and estimate the baseline economy by matching the observed joint distribution of health insurance, health, and income over the life cycle. Quantitative analysis reveals that an individual's insurance status has a substantial and persistent impact on health. Providing universal health coverage would narrow health and life expectancy gaps, with a mixed effect on the income distribution in the absence of any additional redistribution of income or wealth.
Topics & Concepts
Life expectancyHealth insuranceInequalityHealth equityActuarial scienceRedistribution (election)Self-insuranceEconomicsDistribution (mathematics)Demographic economicsPublic economicsBusinessEnvironmental healthHealth careEconomic growthMedicinePolitical scienceMathematicsPopulationLawPoliticsMathematical analysisGlobal Health Care IssuesEmployment and Welfare StudiesHealth disparities and outcomes