International Institute of Social Studies, Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
Soc Sci Med. 2012 Jul;75(1):138-47. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2012.02.035. Epub 2012 Mar 28.
Incentive problems in insurance markets are well-established in economic theory. One of these incentive problems is related to reduced prevention efforts following insurance coverage (ex-ante moral hazard). This prediction is yet to be tested empirically with regard to health insurance, as the health domain is often considered relatively immune to perverse incentives, despite its validation in other insurance markets that entail adverse shocks. This paper tests for the presence of ex-ante moral hazard with reference to malaria prevention in Ghana. We investigate whether enrollment in the country's National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) negatively affects ownership and use of insecticide-treated bed nets (ITNs). We use a panel of 400 households in the Brong Ahafo region for this purpose and employ a propensity-adjusted household fixed effects model. Our results suggest that ex-ante moral hazard is present, especially when the level of effort and cost required for prevention is high. Implications of perverse incentive effects for the NHIS are briefly outlined.
保险市场中的激励问题在经济学理论中已有定论。其中一个激励问题与保险覆盖范围(事前道德风险)后预防措施的减少有关。就健康保险而言,这一预测尚未通过经验进行检验,因为尽管在其他涉及不利冲击的保险市场中得到了验证,但健康领域通常被认为相对不受不当激励的影响。本文以加纳的疟疾预防为例,检验事前道德风险的存在。我们调查了该国的国家健康保险计划(NHIS)的参保是否会对驱虫蚊帐(ITN)的拥有和使用产生负面影响。为此,我们使用了布隆阿哈福地区的 400 户家庭的面板,并采用了倾向调整后的家庭固定效应模型。我们的结果表明,事前道德风险确实存在,尤其是在预防所需的努力和成本水平较高时。简要概述了不当激励效应对 NHIS 的影响。