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Do time preferences explain low health insurance take‐up?

Aurélien Baillon, Owen O’Donnell, Stella Quimbo, Kim van Wilgenburg

2022Journal of Risk & Insurance13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Low insurance take‐up in low‐income populations is not easily explained by the standard single‐period expected utility model of insurance that overlooks the relevance of time preference when liquidity is constrained. We design field survey instruments to elicit quasi‐hyperbolic time preferences, as well as prospect theory risk preferences, and use them to examine whether time preferences explain health insurance behavior of low‐income Filipinos. Consistent with theory, those with stronger parameterized time preference are less likely to insure and the partial association is most pronounced at low wealth where liquidity is most likely to be constrained. Among those with better understanding of insurance, lower take‐up is also associated with present bias. We do not find that insurance is significantly associated with risk preferences.

Topics & Concepts

Time preferencePreferenceMarket liquidityEconomicsRelevance (law)Actuarial scienceExpected utility hypothesisHealth insuranceDynamic inconsistencyEconometricsMonetary economicsMicroeconomicsFinancial economicsPolitical scienceEconomic growthHealth careLawGlobal Health Care IssuesHealth Systems, Economic Evaluations, Quality of LifeHealth disparities and outcomes
Do time preferences explain low health insurance take‐up? | Litcius