E&F - lecture 2 Flashcards

1
Q

What determines our demand for health care?

A
  • The medico – technical model:
    o The doctor is in the lead, acting as a perfect agent
  • The neo-classical model:
    o The patient/ consumer is in the lead, having perfect information
  • The imperfect agency model:
    o Demand is determined by both doctors and patients as information is part of the transaction
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2
Q

The medico-technical model

A
  • Consumer demand is determined by medical experts based on objective needs
  • Assumptions:
    o Health care providers act as perfect agents on behalf of their patients
    o Patients have uniform preferences and fully comply with the decisions made by their providers
    o Providers know with certainty the results of their decision
  • Only one determinant of health care demand: need
  • Thus: individual demand is completely (price-) inelastic; consumers are not sensitive to the price of medical services. Demand is fully determined by the medical expert.
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3
Q

Critique on medico-technical model

A
  • There is substantial empirical evidence that the assumptions of the medico-technical model are violated in practice:
    o Doctors are not perfect agents but also pursue their own, sometimes conflicting, interests
    o Doctors often do not know with certainty the effect of medical treatment
    o Consumers do not have uniform preferences for medical care, even if they would be equally well-informed as their doctors
    o Consumers do not fully comply with the decision of their doctors
    o Consumers are not insensitive to prices and income; they trade-off health care to other goods
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4
Q

The neo-classical (basic economic) model

A
  • Consumer demand is determined only by consumers themselves and these consumers maximize utility subject to a budget constraint
  • Assumptions:
    o Consumers are sovereign and rational: they maximize utility and prefer more above less
    o Consumers have predetermined and ordered preferences; they know in advance what the difference is between goods and services, and they can trade-off the values
    o Consumers know with certainty the results of their consumption decisions; will know exactly the value of what they buy
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5
Q

Critique on the neo-classical model

A

In health care assumptions about consumer behavior are violated:
* Consumers often are not sovereign but feel dependent on the physician’s judgment: information is part of the transaction!
* Consumers often do not have predetermined and well-ordered preferences with regard to medical care
* Consumers do not know with certainty the results of their consumption decisions: demand for health care does not equal demand for health
* Therefore, the demand curve (price) does not necessarily reflect the marginal value of health services to the consumer

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6
Q

The imperfect agency model

A
  • Information is part of the transaction between doctor and patient
  • Demand is partly consumer-initiated and partly provider-initiated
  • Providers act as an imperfect agent on behalf of their patients and may their information surplus to pursue their own interests (income, a=status, leisure), which may conflict with the patient’s interest
  • As a result:
    o Patients demand curve may not reflect how they really value health services
    o Overprovision (supplier induced demand) or underprovision of care may occur, depending on physicians’ preferences and incentives
    o Different payment systems are likely to generate different outcomes
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7
Q

Determinants of health care demand: utility theory

A
  • Consumer demand is determined by consumers who maximize utility subject to a budget constraint
  • Assumptions:
    o Consumers always prefer more above less of the same good  marginal utility of consumption >0
    o Consumers have predetermined and ordered preferences
    o Consumers know with certainty the results of their consumption decisions
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8
Q

Key determinants of health care demand

A
  • Needs (health status): position of indifference curve
  • Wants (preferences): slope of indifference curve (substitution rate)
  • Budget (income): position of budget restriction
  • Prices of health care and other goods: slope of budget restriction
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9
Q

price elasticity of demand formula

A

procentuele verandering in Q/ procentuele verandering in P

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10
Q
  • Warning: price elasticities are point estimates
A

o Price elasticity not only depends on the slope of demand curve (delta p/delta q) but also on the particular point on the demand curve (p,q)
o Makes it difficult to compare price elasticities across different health care settings

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11
Q

elastic

A

change in price has huge impact on quantity

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12
Q

inelastic

A

price decreases, impact relatively small on quantity

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12
Q

what means -1 and 1 price elasticity

A

alles tussen -1 en 1 is inelastisch en alles daarbuiten is elastisch

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12
Q

Problem: which prices?

A
  • In health care consumers often do not pay the full market price because of health insurance (or government subsidies)
  • Empirical studies therefore typically use out-of-pocket prices (e.g., co-payments)
  • But out-of-pocket price elasticities (or coinsurance elasticities) may be biased due to selection effects
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13
Q

How to deal with selection bias?

A
  1. Correct for relevant background variables (health)
    a. Problem: omitted variable bias  you may not measure price sensitivity correctly
  2. Quasi experimental methods (for example between different regions)
    a. Problem: control and experimental groups may not be comparable at baseline
  3. Randomized controlled experiment (randomly assigned to a group)
    a. Problem: social experiment often face ethical constraints
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14
Q

Two important randomized experiments

A
  1. RAND health insurance experiment (1971-1982)
    a. 7700 selected individuals (< 65 years of age; six regions)
    b. Randomly assigned to 4 cost-sharing levels: 0,25,50,95% out-of-pocket
    c. Income dependent limit on out-of-pocket expenses (up to 1000 dollars per year)
    (NB resulting in nonlinear coverage!)
  2. Oregon health insurance experiment (2008)
    a. Natural experiment: lottery for low-income uninsured to get Medicaid insurance
    b. Price variation between randomly selected treatment group and a control group
15
Q

income elasticity of demand

A

percentage change in quantity demanded / percentage change in income

IE kleiner dan 0 –> inferior good
IE groter of gelijk aan 0 –> normal goods
IE tussen 0 en 1 –> necessary goods
IE groter dan 1 –> luxury goods

16
Q

What’s different about health care demand?

A
  • Demand for health care is derived from the demand for health: health care has no utility in itself, but only if it can improve health
  • Demand for health care is often not well defined: people are uncertain about what and how much care they need
  • Health care demand is not independent form health care supply:
    o Doctors can “shift the demand curve” for health care (supplier-induced demand)
  • Price often plays a limited role as a determinant of health care demand:
    o In many countries basic health care is perceived as universal right
    o People typically have to pay only part of the price and do not know the true price
  • Health care is not only a consumption but also an investment good
17
Q

Why overestimation?

A
  • Healthy individuals are more likely to:
    o Have lower demand for health care
    o Choose higher copayments
  • Therefore, the effect of higher copayments on demand for health care, consists of:
    o A true price effect (lower demand because care is more expensice)
    o A health effect (lower demand because consumers are healthier)
  • Thus, the true price elasticity of demand is smaller (in absolute terms) than the estimated out of pocket price elasticity
18
Q

Price elasticities at different levels

A
  • Price elasticities can be measured at different levels of aggregation
  • For instance, you can measure the impact of price change
    o On the total demand of physician services
    o On the demand for services of an individual physician
  • Price elasticities for the total demand for physician services are typically: smaller than price elasticities of demand for individual physicians
19
Q

The impact of income on demand for health care

A
  • Income is another potentially important determinant of health care demand
  • The impact of income is can be analyzed at different levels of aggregation: e.g. at the individual level, the regional level and the country level
  • The impact of income on health care demand may be strongly related to the Prescence and extent of health insurers
  • That’s one of reasons why the impact of income on demand may substantially differ across rich and poor countries
20
Q

The use of income elasticities

A
  • Income elasticities are an important tool for measuring the impact of income on health care demand
  • Income elasticates indicate how important a good or service is for consumers
  • Income elasticities at the individual and at the country level
  • Income elasticities of health care demand at the country level are typically larger than 1
  • In countries with generous health insurance, income elasticities of health care demand are more relevant at the country level
21
Q

Why are individual income elasticities smaller in high income than in low income countries?

A
  • In high-income countries people tend to have (much) better health insurance coverage than in low-income countries
  • Hence, in high-income countries most people have good access to health care irrespective of their income (income is not a binding constraint on health care demand)
  • If in high-income countries people’s income increases this does not have much impact on their health care demand,
    in contrast to low-income countries where people have to pay most health care expenses out-of-pocket
22
Q
A