Long Stephen H, Marquis M Susan
RAND, Arlington, VA 22202, USA.
Inquiry. 2002 Fall;39(3):243-57. doi: 10.5034/inquiryjrnl_39.3.243.
This paper examines how varying the level of subsidies affects participation in a public insurance program, crowd-out of private insurance, and adverse selection. We study the experience in Washington's Basic Health program in 1997. Findings show that adverse selection is not a problem in voluntary public programs. Increasing subsidies have only modest effects on participation in subsidized programs, though the gains are not at the expense of the private market. Overall participation in the subsidized plan is also modest, even though participants benefit from it. The challenge to policymakers is to find program design characteristics, beyond subsidies, that attract the uninsured.
本文探讨了补贴水平的变化如何影响公共保险计划的参与度、私人保险的挤出效应以及逆向选择。我们研究了1997年华盛顿州基本健康计划的情况。研究结果表明,在自愿性公共计划中,逆向选择并非问题。增加补贴对参与补贴计划的影响不大,不过这些收益并非以牺牲私人市场为代价。尽管参与者从中受益,但补贴计划的总体参与度也不高。政策制定者面临的挑战是,除了补贴之外,找到能够吸引未参保者的项目设计特点。