Qin Paige, Chernew Michael
Harvard University, United States.
Harvard Medical School, 180A Longwood Avenue, Boston, MA 02115, United States.
J Health Econ. 2014 Dec;38:77-87. doi: 10.1016/j.jhealeco.2014.08.001.
This paper examines the trade-off between wages and employer spending on health insurance for public sector workers, and the relationship between coverage and hours worked. Our primary approach compares trends in wages and hours for public employees with and without state/local government provided health insurance using individual-level micro-data from the 1992-2011 CPS. To adjust for differences between insured and uninsured public sector employees, we create a matched sample based on an employee's propensity to receive health insurance. We assess the relationship between state contribution to the health plan premium, state-level healthcare spending, and the wages and hours of state and local government employees. We find modest reductions in wages are associated with having employer-sponsored health insurance (ESHI), although this effect is not precisely measured. The reduction in wages associated with having ESHI is larger among non-unionized workers. Further, we find little evidence that provision of health insurance increases hours worked.
本文考察了公共部门员工工资与雇主在医疗保险上的支出之间的权衡,以及医保覆盖范围与工作时长之间的关系。我们的主要方法是利用1992 - 2011年当前人口调查(CPS)的个人层面微观数据,比较有和没有州/地方政府提供医疗保险的公共部门员工的工资和工作时长趋势。为了调整参保和未参保公共部门员工之间的差异,我们基于员工获得医疗保险的倾向创建了一个匹配样本。我们评估了州对医保保费的贡献、州层面的医疗支出与州和地方政府员工的工资及工作时长之间的关系。我们发现,有雇主提供的医疗保险(ESHI)与工资有适度降低相关,尽管这种影响的衡量并不精确。在非工会化工人中,与有ESHI相关的工资降低幅度更大。此外,我们几乎没有发现证据表明提供医疗保险会增加工作时长。