Health insurance;
Occupational choice;
Entrepreneur;
Misallocation;
Patient protection and affordable care act;
ENTREPRENEURSHIP;
REFORM;
FIRMS;
FRICTIONS;
DYNAMICS;
COSTS;
RISK;
D O I:
10.1016/j.red.2016.09.002
中图分类号:
F [经济];
学科分类号:
02 ;
摘要:
Most working-age Americans obtain health insurance through the workplace. U.S. law requires employers to use a common price, but the value of insurance varies with idiosyncratic health risk. Hence, linking employment and health insurance creates a wedge between the marginal cost and benefit of insurance. We study the impact of this wedge on occupational choice and welfare in a general equilibrium model. Agents face idiosyncratic health expenditure shocks, have or managerial and worker productivity, and choose whether to be workers or entrepreneurs. First, we consider a private insurance indemnity policy that removes the link between employment and health insurance, so only ability matters for occupational choice. By construction, this is the most efficient policy. We find a welfare gain of 2.28% from decoupling health insurance and employment. Second, we tighten the link by increasing employment-based health insurance from the current U.S. level of 62% to 100%, and find a welfare loss of - 0.61%. (C) 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.