Old, Frail, and Uninsured: Accounting for Features of the U.S. Long‐Term Care Insurance Market
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Published:2019
Issue:3
Volume:87
Page:981-1019
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ISSN:0012-9682
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Container-title:Econometrica
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language:en
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Short-container-title:ECTA
Author:
Braun R. Anton1,
Kopecky Karen A.1,
Koreshkova Tatyana23
Affiliation:
1. Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta
2. Department of Economics, Concordia University
3. CIREQ
Abstract
Half of U.S. 50‐year‐olds will experience a nursing home stay before they die, and one in ten will incur out‐of‐pocket long‐term care expenses in excess of $200,000. Surprisingly, only about 10% of individuals over age 62 have private long‐term care insurance (LTCI) and LTCI takeup rates are low at all wealth levels. We analyze the contributions of Medicaid, administrative costs, and asymmetric information about nursing home entry risk to low LTCI takeup rates in a quantitative equilibrium contracting model. As in practice, the insurer in the model assigns individuals to risk groups based on noisy indicators of their nursing home entry risk. All individuals in frail and/or low‐income risk groups are denied coverage because the cost of insuring any individual in these groups exceeds that individual's willingness‐to‐pay. Individuals in insurable risk groups are offered a menu of contracts whose terms vary across risk groups. We find that Medicaid accounts for low LTCI takeup rates of poorer individuals. However, administrative costs and adverse selection are responsible for low takeup rates of the rich. The model reproduces other empirical features of the LTCI market including the fact that owners of LTCI have about the same nursing home entry rates as non‐owners.
Funder
Fondation pour la Recherche sur la Biodiversite
Utah State University
University of Minnesota
McGill University
Notre Dame University-Louaize
Purdue University
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Virginia Commonwealth University
Publisher
The Econometric Society
Subject
Economics and Econometrics
Cited by
42 articles.
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