Selection and Behavioral Responses of Health Insurance Subsidies in the Long Run: Evidence from a Field Experiment in Ghana
We conduct a randomized experiment that varies one-time health insurance subsidy amounts (partial and full) in Ghana to study the impacts of subsidies on insurance enrollment and health care utilization. We find that both partial and full subsidies promote insurance enrollment in the long run, even...
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Zusammenfassung: | We conduct a randomized experiment that varies one-time health insurance
subsidy amounts (partial and full) in Ghana to study the impacts of subsidies
on insurance enrollment and health care utilization. We find that both partial
and full subsidies promote insurance enrollment in the long run, even after the
subsidies expired. Although the long run enrollment rate and selective
enrollment do not differ by subsidy level, long run health care utilization
increased only for the partial subsidy group. We show that this can plausibly
be explained by stronger learning-through-experience behavior in the partial
than in the full subsidy group. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2105.00617 |