One of the key provisions of the Affordable Care Act was the ensuring coverage for “pre- existing conditions,” which had formerly been excluded from insurance plans as people with known medical conditions that will require treatment with certainty, the costs of which are virtually guaranteed to be more than the premiums that insurance companies could charge Suppose we have a population of patients with different health profiles, so that the cost of future treatment X is uniformly distributed on the interval [0, 1000], X˜ ∼ U [0, 1000]. Suppose that we have an insurance company that is bound to offer the same plan to all customers who wish to buy it and cannot deny coverage based on pre-existing conditions. The market for insurance is competitive, so that the insurance company must set its premium equal to the expected future payout. P = E[X˜] Another key provision of the ACA was the “individual mandate,” which required everyone to buy insurance so that young and healthy individuals would reduce the overall risk in the pool of insures. With a mandate in place, what is the premium P charged by the insurance company? a) Now that the premium has changed, people must reconsider whether to buy insurance yet again. Of course, this means that the insurance company must adjust its premium once What is the Nash equilibrium outcome? Who buys insurance in this world? b) Why do the resolutions typically proposed for other instances of the lemons problem fail to address issues of adverse selection in the health insurance market?
One of the key provisions of the Affordable Care Act was the ensuring coverage for “pre- existing conditions,” which had formerly been excluded from insurance plans as people with known medical conditions that will require treatment with certainty, the costs of which are virtually guaranteed to be more than the premiums that insurance companies could charge Suppose we have a population of patients with different health profiles, so that the cost of future treatment X is uniformly distributed on the interval [0, 1000],
X˜ ∼ U [0, 1000].
Suppose that we have an insurance company that is bound to offer the same plan to all customers who wish to buy it and cannot deny coverage based on pre-existing conditions. The market for insurance is competitive, so that the insurance company must set its premium equal to the expected future payout.
P = E[X˜]
Another key provision of the ACA was the “individual mandate,” which required everyone to buy insurance so that young and healthy individuals would reduce the overall risk in the pool of insures. With a mandate in place, what is the premium P charged by the insurance company?
a) Now that the premium has changed, people must reconsider whether to buy insurance yet again. Of course, this means that the insurance company must adjust its premium once What is the Nash equilibrium outcome? Who buys insurance in this world?
b) Why do the resolutions typically proposed for other instances of the lemons problem fail to address issues of adverse selection in the health insurance market?
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