Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Www.antonydavies.org There are two types of seat in the room: 35 Consumers 14 Insurers Sit one person to each seat. If you are comfortable doing a lot.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Www.antonydavies.org There are two types of seat in the room: 35 Consumers 14 Insurers Sit one person to each seat. If you are comfortable doing a lot."— Presentation transcript:

1 www.antonydavies.org There are two types of seat in the room: 35 Consumers 14 Insurers Sit one person to each seat. If you are comfortable doing a lot of rudimentary math, sit at an Insurer seat. After all the seats are filled, extra bodies should team up with insurers. Do not team up with consumers.

2 www.antonydavies.org Health Insurance

3 www.antonydavies.org The Players and the Goals In this experiment, there are CONSUMERS and INSURERS. INSURERS sell INSURANCE. CONSUMERS buy FOOD and INSURANCE. 3

4 www.antonydavies.org Consumers Each consumer gets $25 per day. A unit of food costs $1. 4 $25 The more food the consumer eats, the happier the consumer becomes.

5 www.antonydavies.org Consumers: The Catch Each day, consumers face some risk of badness. 5 vs. If badness befalls the consumer, the consumer loses all of the purchased food for that day.

6 www.antonydavies.org Consumers: The Insurance But, consumers can purchase insurance contracts from the insurance companies. 6 Each contract pays the consumer $1 worth of food if badness befalls the consumer that day.

7 www.antonydavies.org Consumers: Example Suppose you can purchase insurance contracts at a price of $0.50 each (the price of food is always $1 each). 7 $20 You spend $5 on insurance contracts. The remaining $20 is automatically spent on food. 10 insurance contracts 20 food (Consumers may buy fractions of a unit of food.) $20 $5

8 www.antonydavies.org Consumers: Example If badness does not befall you, then you eat 20 units of food and are very happy. 8 Very Happy !!

9 www.antonydavies.org Consumers: Example If badness does befall you, the 20 units of food disappear, and each insurance contract pays $1. You automatically buy food, eat it, and are somewhat happy. 9 Somewhat Happy

10 www.antonydavies.org Decision Consumers: Example The consumer makes one set of decisions that are repeated for each of the three days. Daily outcomes may change due to randomness. Day 1 Day 2Day 3 10

11 www.antonydavies.org Consumers Each consumer’s goal: Maximize happiness More insurance means  More food when badness befalls.  Less food when badness does not befall.  Too little insurance is bad. Too much insurance is also bad. 11

12 www.antonydavies.org Insurers Each insurer can write as many insurance contracts as liked and charge any price. 12

13 www.antonydavies.org Insurers If badness does not befall the consumer, the insurer walks away with the money the consumer paid for the contracts. 13 $$$ $$$

14 www.antonydavies.org Insurers If badness does befall the consumer, the insurer pays the consumer $1 for each contract the insurer sold the consumer. 14

15 www.antonydavies.org Insurers: Example You sell Consumer A six contracts for $0.60 each, and sell Consumer B five contracts for $0.30 each. 15 For each of the three days, you collect $3.60 from Consumer A and $1.50 from Consumer B. $15.30 Revenue = $3.60 $1.50 $3.60 $1.50

16 www.antonydavies.org Insurers: Example Suppose that badness then befalls Consumer B on two of the days, but Consumer A on none of the days. 16 You owe Consumer B $1 for each contract for the two days. $15.30 Revenue = $10.00 Cost = $5.30 Profit = $5.00

17 www.antonydavies.org Insurers: Example Alternatively, suppose that badness befalls Consumer A on all three days, but Consumer B on none of the days. 17 You owe Consumer A $1 for each contract for the three days. $15.30 Revenue = $18.00 Cost = $2.70 Loss = (Insurers do not need cash reserves to cover policies.) $6.00

18 www.antonydavies.org Insurers Each insurer’s goal: Maximize expected profit Insurers can ask whatever prices they like for contracts  Too low a price is bad. Too high a price is also bad. 18

19 www.antonydavies.org 19 Type 1 10% Badness There are five types of consumer. Each faces a different probability of badness. Type 2 20% Type 3 30% Type 4 40% Type 5 50%

20 www.antonydavies.org The Objects 20 = insurance contract(s) = sales register

21 www.antonydavies.org Contracts 21 12 6 $4.80 Customer 6 purchases 12 contracts from insurer 4 for $0.40 each. This contract generates $4.80 daily income for three days for the insurer.

22 www.antonydavies.org Register 22 12 6 0.3 The register is for your own use in tracking your customers. Be aware of customers who buy a lot of insurance. At the end of the round, watch to see which of your customers has badness befall them.  These are possible signs that the customer is high risk. You will need to estimate consumers’ risks.

23 www.antonydavies.org The Mechanics 23 Agent InsurersConsumers Head Office $0.50 Prices are per contract. You may buy multiple contracts.

24 www.antonydavies.org The Mechanics 24 Agent InsurersConsumers Head Office

25 www.antonydavies.org The Mechanics 25 Agent InsurersConsumers Head Office Consumers: Keep track of how much you have spent. You need to save cash to buy food and you only have $20. Head Office: Keep track of risk estimates and expected profits. Advise the agent on setting prices. Agent: Try to estimate consumers’ risks based on how many contracts they want and the prices they are willing to pay.

26 www.antonydavies.org Risk Types 26

27 www.antonydavies.org 27

28 www.antonydavies.org 28

29 www.antonydavies.org 29

30 www.antonydavies.org Ready to begin… 30

31 www.antonydavies.org 31 Consumers:You have $25. Buy some insurance (if you want). All remaining money goes to food. Insurers:Sell insurance to maximize expected profit.

32 www.antonydavies.org Accounting Phase Consumers report: Contracts purchased, cost, and from which insurer(s) 32

33 www.antonydavies.org 33

34 www.antonydavies.org 34

35 www.antonydavies.org 35

36 www.antonydavies.org Mandated Insurance People have lobbied the government to require insurance companies to provide at least 50 contracts’ worth of coverage. Insurers now may not sell fewer than 50 contracts to a consumer.* *(unless the consumer already owns at least 50 contracts) 36

37 www.antonydavies.org Ready to begin… 37

38 www.antonydavies.org 38 Consumers:You have $25. Buy some insurance (if you want). All remaining money goes to food. Insurers:Sell insurance to maximize expected profit. You may not sell fewer than 50 contracts to a consumer unless that consumer already owns at least 50 contracts.

39 www.antonydavies.org 39 Accounting Phase Consumers report: Contracts purchased, cost, and from which insurer(s)

40 www.antonydavies.org 40

41 www.antonydavies.org 41

42 www.antonydavies.org 42

43 www.antonydavies.org Mandatory Insurance Concerned that some consumers are uninsured, the government requires that all consumers buy at least 50 contracts. 43

44 www.antonydavies.org Ready to begin… 44

45 www.antonydavies.org 45 Consumers:You have $25. You must buy at least 50 contracts. All remaining money goes to food. Insurers:Sell insurance to maximize expected profit.

46 www.antonydavies.org 46 Accounting Phase Consumers report: Contracts purchased, cost, and from which insurer(s)

47 www.antonydavies.org 47

48 www.antonydavies.org 48

49 www.antonydavies.org 49

50 www.antonydavies.org Results… 50

51 www.antonydavies.org Compared to the free market, what do you believe happens to the price of insurance under… 1.Mandated insurance 2.Mandatory insurance 51

52 www.antonydavies.org 52

53 www.antonydavies.org 53 Compared to the free market, what do you believe happens to the number of uninsured people under… 1.Mandated insurance 2.Mandatory insurance

54 www.antonydavies.org 54

55 www.antonydavies.org Consider The price per contract isn’t the consumer’s health care cost. The consumer’s health care cost is the total amount of money the consumer pays for insurance. 55

56 www.antonydavies.org Compared to the free market, what do you believe happens to the total cost of insurance per insured person under… 1.Mandated insurance 2.Mandatory insurance 56

57 www.antonydavies.org 57

58 www.antonydavies.org 58

59 www.antonydavies.org 59 Compared to the free market, what do you believe happens to food purchases under… 1.Mandated insurance 2.Mandatory insurance

60 www.antonydavies.org 60

61 www.antonydavies.org 61

62 www.antonydavies.org 62 On whom do you believe the insurance companies make or lose money in each scenario?

63 www.antonydavies.org 63

64 www.antonydavies.org 64

65 www.antonydavies.org Forces people to consume quantities of goods and insurance that they may not want to consume. Transfers wealth from low risk to high risk people.  A better solution is simply to tax the low risk people, give the money to the high risk people and let them buy what they want. 65 What is the effect of insurance mandates? (but what if they don’t buy insurance?)

66 www.antonydavies.org But, we have to do something! Look at what has been happening to the cost of health care over time! 66

67 www.antonydavies.org 67 Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics (www.economy.com) Price of medical care has increased 350% since 1980 versus 135% for other consumer prices.

68 www.antonydavies.org But, the cost of health care is only half of the picture. What has been happening to the quality of health care? 68

69 www.antonydavies.org How do we measure the quality of health care? 1.What is “quality?” 69 2.How do we account for care didn’t exist in the past? 3.How do we weigh qualities across different types of care?

70 www.antonydavies.org How does one measure the quality of health care? An easy and only-somewhat-sucky measure of the effectiveness of health care is the mortality rate. 70

71 www.antonydavies.org 71 Source: Statistical Abstract of the United States, 2008, Table 77. From 1960 to 2006, infant mortality fell 70%.

72 www.antonydavies.org 72 Source: Statistical Abstract of the United States, 2008, Table 110. Deaths by Influenza and Pneumonia (per 100,000 population) From 1960 to 2004, deaths due to influenza and pneumonia fell 60%.

73 www.antonydavies.org 73 Source: Statistical Abstract of the United States, 2008, Table 77. From 1960 to 2006, the mortality rate fell by 15%.

74 www.antonydavies.org 74 What does the increased cost of health care buy us?

75 www.antonydavies.org 75 Source: Derived from Statistical Abstract of the United States, and the Bureau of Economic Analysis. If the quality of our health care had remained at the level it was in 1967, how many people would have died each year since 1967?

76 www.antonydavies.org 76 Source: Derived from Statistical Abstract of the United States, and the Bureau of Economic Analysis. 600,000 lives saved just in 2010

77 www.antonydavies.org What are the claimed problems? 77 Many people are uninsured. Many people cannot afford insurance. Lack of competition makes insurance too expensive.

78 www.antonydavies.org 78 Many people are uninsured

79 www.antonydavies.org 79 Source: Income, Poverty, and Health Insurance Coverage in the U.S.: 2006, US Census Bureau. The percentage of the population that is uninsured has remained rather stable over time.

80 www.antonydavies.org 80 Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics, Census Bureau (15% of the population) How many Americans are uninsured?

81 www.antonydavies.org 81 Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics, Census Bureau (12% of the population) How many Americans are uninsured?

82 www.antonydavies.org 82 Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics, Census Bureau (4% of the population) How many Americans are uninsured? If we count one-third of this group, the uninsured are between 6% and 8% of the population depending on whether or not we count this group.

83 www.antonydavies.org 83 Many people cannot afford insurance

84 www.antonydavies.org 84 Source: Individual Health Insurance 2009, America’s Health Insurance Plans Center for Policy Research The average cost for individual coverage is $3,300. The average cost for family coverage (adjusted to the mean family size) is $6,900.

85 www.antonydavies.org 85 Source: Individual Health Insurance 2009, America’s Health Insurance Plans Center for Policy Research Community Rating  Cannot charge based on health history Guaranteed Issue  May not deny coverage

86 www.antonydavies.org 86 Source: Individual Health Insurance 2009, America’s Health Insurance Plans Center for Policy Research Annual premia are significantly higher for low deductible policies.

87 www.antonydavies.org 87 Source: Consumer Expenditures, US Bureau of Labor Statistics, 2009. Average annual expenditures (per household) compared to the cost of family health insurance.

88 www.antonydavies.org 88 Lack of competition makes insurance expensive.

89 www.antonydavies.org 89 The law makes it difficult for insurance companies to operate across state lines. Individual insurance is subject to mandates that employer-provided insurance is not. Employer-provided insurance benefits are tax- free, which causes an increase in demand for insurance and health services.

90 www.antonydavies.org 90 Can one place a value on a human life? (and, if yes, is it wrong to do so?) Yes, it is possible. No, it is not wrong to do so.  Almost everyone does it almost every day.

91 www.antonydavies.org Seat Belts on School Buses It costs (on average) $2.5 million for every child’s life saved.  Should we install seatbelts on school buses?

92 www.antonydavies.org Spend $2.5 million on:# Lives Saved Annually Seatbelts on school buses1 Airbags in cars3 Heart transplants13 Malaria prevention975 If our concern is saving lives, then we should not spend money for seatbelts on school buses because every 1 life saved will be offset by 975 lives we might otherwise have saved.


Download ppt "Www.antonydavies.org There are two types of seat in the room: 35 Consumers 14 Insurers Sit one person to each seat. If you are comfortable doing a lot."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google