Abstract
BackgroundChina has made remarkable achievements in alleviating poverty under its current poverty standards. Despite these immense successes, the challenge of consolidating these achievements remains. In reality, health risks are among the significant factors causing rural households to fall into poverty, and medical insurance is the significant factor mitigating household vulnerability to poverty. Therefore, alleviating or guarding against households falling into poverty is essential.MethodsThis paper establishes a multi-equilibrium model that incorporates heterogeneous health risks and medical insurance. Through parameter calibration and value function iteration, numerical solutions are derived.ResultsHeterogeneous health risks significantly increase poverty vulnerability and wealth inequality in rural households. Medical insurance, through its investment incentives and loss compensation effects, efficiently mitigates these issues, especially benefiting those in poorer health. Furthermore, the dual-slanted compensation policy efficiently mitigates the adverse effects of “reverse redistribution.”ConclusionMedical insurance effectively mitigates household vulnerability to poverty and wealth inequality. Government departments must establish health records for residents. By recognizing variations in health conditions, these departments can provide households with poorer health conditions with a higher medical expense compensation ratio. In addition, the government should further focus medical expense reimbursements toward households on the cusp of escaping poverty to ensure that they are not plunged back (or further) into poverty due to medical expenses.
Reference36 articles.
1. Endogenous health risks, poverty traps, and the roles of health insurance in poverty alleviation;Liao;Heal Econ Rev,2022
2. Defining and measuring health poverty;Clarke;Soc Sci Med,2020
3. Health risk, income effect, and the stability of farmers’ poverty alleviation in deep poverty areas: a case study of S-county in Qinba Mountain area;Song;Int J Environ Res Public Health,2022
4. Poverty vulnerability and health risk action path of families of rural elderly with chronic diseases: empirical analysis of 1, 852 families in central and Western China;Ma;Front Public Health,2022
5. Socioeconomic inequalities in health after age 50: are health risk behaviors to blame?;Shaw;Soc Sci Med,2014