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Chapter 31 (cont.) Income, Poverty, and Health Care
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Slide 31-27 Poverty and Attempts to Eliminate It Defining poverty –Official poverty level in 2005 for an urban family of four was $19,000. Adjusted annually for inflation Does not include transfer payments
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Slide 31-28 International Example: The U. S. Poverty Level Vs. Incomes Abroad The World Bank publishes an annual report giving the per capita incomes of about 150 nations. Of these, only 26 have per capita incomes higher than the poverty income threshold defined for the U.S.
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Slide 31-29 Relative Poverty: Comparing Household Income and Household Spending Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics; U.S. Bureau of the Census Figure 31-7
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Slide 31-30 Poverty and Attempts to Eliminate It Attacks on poverty: major income maintenance programs –Social Security OASDI –90 percent of all employed persons covered –In 2005, 45 million people received OASDI payments averaging $875/month
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Slide 31-31 Poverty and Attempts to Eliminate It Supplemental Security Income (SSI) –Minimum income for the: Aged Blind Disabled
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Slide 31-32 Poverty and Attempts to Eliminate It Temporary Assistance to Needy Families (TANF) –5-year limit for each person –Must seek training and employment
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Slide 31-33 Poverty and Attempts to Eliminate It Food stamps –Government-issued coupons that can be used to purchase food –In 2005, one in nine citizens received food stamps
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Slide 31-34 Policy Example: What are Food Stamps Worth? Food stamps can only be used to purchase food items approved for the program. When food stamp coupons are traded illegally on the underground market, they are traded at about 65 percent of their face value.
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Slide 31-35 Poverty and Attempts to Eliminate It Earned Income Tax Credit Program –Families with low incomes receive a graduated benefit
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Slide 31-36 Poverty and Attempts to Eliminate It No apparent reduction in poverty –1973—11 percent –1983—15 percent –1990—13.1 percent
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Slide 31-37 Health Care America’s health care situation –16 percent of U.S. real GDP is devoted to spending on health care. –Per capita spending on health care is greater in the United States than anywhere else in the world.
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Slide 31-38 Percentage of Total National Income Spent on Health Care in the United States Figure 31-8 Source: U.S. Department of Commerce; U.S. Department of Health and Human Services; Deloitte and Touch LLP; VHA, Inc.
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Slide 31-39 Health Care Why have health care costs risen so much? –The age-health care expenditure equation Aging population increases the demand for health care –New technologies –Third-party financing
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Slide 31-40 Third Party versus Out-of-Pocket Health Care Payments Figure 31-9 Source: Health Care Financing Administration; U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
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Slide 31-41 Health Care Price, quantity demanded –Large percent of medical services payments made by third parties –Price to the consumer drops and the quantity demanded increases Moral hazard and consumers –An individual with a zero deductible for medical care may engage in a less healthful lifestyle than one who must pay a $1,000 deductible
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Slide 31-42 The Demand for Health Care Services At P 1 quantity demanded is Q 1. If the price falls to zero, quantity demanded increases to Q 2. Figure 31-10 D P 1 Q 1 Q 2 Quantity of Health Care Services per Year Price
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Slide 31-43 Health Care Moral hazard as it affects physicians and hospitals –Due to third-party payments, patients do not have to worry about the cost of operations and medical procedures. –Physicians and hospitals order more of them since they are reimbursed on the basis of medical procedures.
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Slide 31-44 Health Care Fully 30 percent of Medicare expenditures are for patients in their last year of life.
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Slide 31-45 Health Care Is national health insurance the answer? 40 million Americans are uninsured at some point during the year National health insurance would increase the amount of national income devoted to medical services
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Slide 31-46 Federal Medicare Spending Figure 31-11 Source: Economic Report of the President; U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics
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Slide 31-47 Health Care Countering the moral hazard problem: a Health Savings Account (HSAs) –A tax-exempt health care account to which individuals would pay into on a regular basis and from which medical care expenses could be paid
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Slide 31-48 Issues and Applications: Should U.S. Health Care Copy Other Nation’s Programs? Is the rise in health care costs evidence of a crisis? To a certain extent, residents of the U.S. choose to spend more on health care. In other countries, waiting lists for certain procedures serve to dampen the amount of health care people receive.
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Slide 31-49 Summary Discussion of Learning Objectives Using a Lorenz curve to represent a nation’s income distribution –The more bowed a Lorenz curve, the more unequally income is distributed Key determinants of income differences across individuals –Age –Marginal productivity differences –Discrimination
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Slide 31-50 Summary Discussion of Learning Objectives Theories of desired income distribution –Productivity standard –Egalitarian principle Alternative approaches to measuring and addressing poverty –Absolute poverty standard –Relative poverty standard
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Slide 31-51 Summary Discussion of Learning Objectives Major reasons for rising health care costs –Aging U.S. population –Higher priced medical technologies –Third-party financing of health care expenditures –Moral hazard
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Slide 31-52 Summary Discussion of Learning Objectives Alternative approaches to paying for health care –Rationing by price –Rationing by queues
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End of Chapter 31 Income, Poverty, and Health Care
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