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CHAPTER 10 GOVERNMENT AND THE MARKET FOR HEALTH CARE McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Figure 10.1: Uses of health care funds in the United States (2004) Other (10%) Research (2%) Public Health Activity (3%) Hospital Care (32%) Administrative (7%) Nursing Home Care (6%) Prescription Drugs (11%) Home Health Care (3%) Dental Services (4%) SOURCE: Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services [2005a]. Physician and Clinical Services (22%) 10-2 Figure 10.2: Sources of health care funds in the United States (2004) Other Government Payments (13%) Private Health Insurance (35%) Medicaid and SCHIP (16%) Medicare (17%) Other Private Payments (7%) SOURCE: Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services [2005a]. Out-of-Pocket Payments (13%) 10-3 Private Health Insurance World War II Era Price Controls Restrict Pay Not Health Insurance 1940-50 9.1% to 50.3% 10-4 Private Health Insurance Implicit Federal Tax Subsidy Health Care Not Taxed! $50,000 in Wages $5,000 in Health Care Suppose 25% Tax Rate $45K Plus Health Care Better? 10-5 The Advantages of Employer-Provided Health Insurance Increase the risk pool Reduce adverse selection Lower administrative costs 10-6 Employer-Provided Health Insurance and Job Lock Job lock Health Insurance Policy Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (KennedyKassenbaum Act) Include New Employees who Previously had Insurance within 12 Months Even with Preconditions 10-7 Cost Control and Private Insurance Cost-based reimbursement (fee-for-service) Managed care Capitation-based reimbursement Health Maintenance Organizations (HMOs) Preferred Provider Organizations (PPOs) Point-of-service (POS) 10-8 Medicare: Overview Figure 10.3: Medicare expenditures (1966-2004) 350 3 2.5 250 2 200 1.5 150 1 100 Expenditures as % GDP Real Expenditures (2004 $ Billions) 300 0.5 50 0 0 1966 1968 1970 1972 1974 1976 1978 1980 1982 1984 1986 1988 1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 Year Expenditures (Billions $) SOURCE: Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services [2005a]. Expenditures as % of GDP 10-9 How Medicare Works Benefits Part A – Hospital insurance (HI) Part B – Supplementary medical insurance (SMI) Financing Payroll tax funds HI General revenues fund SMI 10-10 Prescription Drug Benefit Part C – Medicare Advantage Part D – Prescription Drug Benefit Monthly premium Low deductible Donut hole Generous coverage for high costs 10-11 Cost Control Under Medicare Medicare’s retrospective payment system Medicare’s prospective payment system Diagnosis related groups Resource-based relative value scale system Medicare Managed Care 10-12 Medicare: Impacts on Spending and Health Expenditures on health care for the elderly Health outcomes 10-13 Medicaid: Overview Medicaid Low Income 44.7 million (2005) 48.5% Children State Children’s Health Insurance Program 10-14 Figure 10.4: Medicaid expenditures (1966-2004) 3 300 2.5 250 2 200 1.5 150 1 100 Expenditures as % GDP Real Expenditures (2004 $ Billions) 350 0.5 50 0 0 1966 1968 1970 1972 1974 1976 1978 1980 1982 1984 1986 1988 1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 Year Expenditures (Billions $) Expenditures as % GDP SOURCE: Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services [2005a]. 10-15 Financing and Administration Joint Federal-State financing State administration 10-16 Benefits States obligated to offer minimum package of benefits States may offer more generous benefits State administrative flexibility 10-17 Medicaid: Impacts on Health Take-up rate 5 to 25% after expansions Problem? Crowding out Empirical Evidence: Are Medicaid expansions effective? Crowding Out and No Take Up 10-18 Quantity of all other goods Quantity of all other goods Quantity of all other goods Does Public Insurance Crowd Out Private Insurance? F A F A B C 0 A B B M Amount of publicly provided insurance F C 0 M Health insurance Amount of publicly provided insurance C 0 M Health insurance Amount of publicly provided insurance Health insurance 10-19 Review: Problems with US Health Care High Costs Supply Shortage Technology Inefficient Insurance Deadweight Losses Lack of Risk Pooling Low Levels of Health 10-20 Health Care Reform Individual Mandates Health Savings Accounts Not Taxed unless used for non-health care Catastrophic Insurance Policy Single Payer 10-21 Health Care Reform Who supports universal health care? Who support health care reform this year? Should employers be fined if they do not provide health insurance? Should taxes be raised on the wealthy to reform health care? Should the government mandate everybody have health care? 10-22