On the financial superiority of Medicaid specialist insurers: a novel transactions cost/supply chain approach

From 2002 to 2016, U.S. health insurers specialising in Medicaid financially outperformed health insurers specialising in other populations (i.e. groups, individuals, Medicare and federal employees). For this robust finding we developed a novel methodology incorporating transactions cost economics t...

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Veröffentlicht in:Geneva papers on risk and insurance. Issues and practice 2023-01, Vol.48 (1), p.32-67
Hauptverfasser: Baranoff, Etti G., Sager, Thomas W., Shi, Bo, Baranoff, Dalit
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container_title Geneva papers on risk and insurance. Issues and practice
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creator Baranoff, Etti G.
Sager, Thomas W.
Shi, Bo
Baranoff, Dalit
description From 2002 to 2016, U.S. health insurers specialising in Medicaid financially outperformed health insurers specialising in other populations (i.e. groups, individuals, Medicare and federal employees). For this robust finding we developed a novel methodology incorporating transactions cost economics theory with supply chain performance models. The novel approach regards the insured populations as products supplied to health insurers (‘buyers’) in a supply chain. The populations are the ‘indigent’, ‘elderly’, ‘employed’ etc. Each has different care utilisation frequencies of encounters, admissions to hospitals and days in hospital, as well as severities of expenses, contractual arrangements and transaction costs advantages. The population attributes act on return on capital (ROC) through their differential interactions with insurer (buyer) attributes. The results suggest that Medicaid specialist insurers, with their extensive involvement with indigents, have the easiest pathways toward ROC optimisation by tweaking benefits, premiums and administrative expenses, which proxy transaction cost advantages.
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subjects Administrative expenses
Economics and Finance
Expenditures
Federal employees
Finance
Health care policy
Health insurance
Insurance
Insurance industry
Literature reviews
Medicaid
Medicare
Older people
Risk Management
Supply chains
title On the financial superiority of Medicaid specialist insurers: a novel transactions cost/supply chain approach
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