AI Article Synopsis

  • The effectiveness of publicly-subsidized social insurance programs hinges on how strategic insurers interact with the subsidy system.
  • The study focuses on Medicare's prescription drug coverage and finds that the existing subsidy mechanism is effective in minimizing the push for increased subsidies while functioning similarly to a flat voucher.
  • More efficient subsidy mechanisms tend to keep demand sensitivity, restrict market power exploitation, and maintain a connection between prices and marginal costs.

Article Abstract

The efficiency of publicly-subsidized, privately-provisioned social insurance programs depends on the interaction between strategic insurers and the subsidy mechanism. We study this interaction in the context of Medicare's prescription drug coverage program. We find that the observed mechanism is successful in keeping "raise-the-subsidy" incentives relatively low, acts much like a flat voucher, and obtains a level of welfare close to the optimal voucher. Across a range of counterfactuals, we find that more efficient subsidy mechanisms share three features: they retain the marginal elasticity of demand, limit the exercise of market power, and preserve the link between prices and marginal costs.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7236560PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/705550DOI Listing

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