Faculty seminar with Vegard Nygaard
Welcome to Faculty seminar
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Welcome to seminar with Vegard Nygaard from University of Houston
Homepage to Vegard Nygaard here
Title of talk:
«The impact of U.S. employer-sponsored insurance in the 20th century».
Abstract:
The introduction of employer-sponsored insurance (ESI) in the 1940s led to the
largest decline in the uninsurance rate in U.S. history. To study the fiscal and
welfare implications of this insurance expansion, we endogenize the selection of
workers into jobs with and without ESI in a general equilibrium life-cycle model
where consumers face idiosyncratic health shocks. Our model rationalizes non-
targeted empirical patterns related to ESI coverage between 1940 and 2010 and
in recent cross-sectional data. ESI leads to moderate welfare gains in the short
run (0.5 percent of lifetime consumption for the average consumer) but zero gains
or even moderate losses in the long run. The reason is that the health insurance
benefit provided by ESI dominates in the short run but the tax increase required to
offset ESI tax exemptions dominates in the long run. We substantiate these welfare
estimates by showing that our model rationalizes both the level and rise in total ESI
tax exemptions. Finally, we show that tax-financed universal health insurance—
considered among policymakers in the 1930s—would have led to significantly higher
welfare gains.
