Labor outcomes of health shocks and dependent coverage expansions

TitleLabor outcomes of health shocks and dependent coverage expansions
Publication TypeThesis
Year of Publication2013
AuthorsBurgdorf, Jr., JR
AdvisorPacula, RLiccardo
Degree3572588
Number of Pages117
Date Published2013
UniversityThe Pardee RAND Graduate School
CitySanta Monica, CA
Thesis TypePh.D.
Accession Number1444630929
KeywordsEmployment and Labor Force, Health Conditions and Status, Healthcare, Insurance, Medicare/Medicaid/Health Insurance, Methodology, Public Policy
Abstract

The traditional bundling of health insurance with employment in the United States may distort workers' labor market choices by encouraging full-time wage and salary employment relative to part-time work, self-employment, and not working. However, disentangling the effects of employer-provided health insurance on labor market outcomes is a challenging empirical issue. To overcome this issue, I conduct three studies which exploit three sources of variation in individual valuation of employer-provided group health care. The first study considers the differential impact of health shocks on self-employed workers and wage and salary workers using panel data from the Health and Retirement Study. I find that among older workers in perfect health, health shocks have a larger effect on exits from self-employment than on exits from wage and salary work, implying that extending group coverage to small firm owners may reduce the number of health-related firm failures. The second study uses data from the Current Population Survey's Annual Social and Economic Supplement (ASEC), and was originally intended to examine the effect of state-level dependent coverage expansions on employment outcomes for young adults. Instead, I uncover new evidence that these reforms have had a more limited impact on young adults' insurance rates than indicated by previous research. The third study again uses ASEC data, but considers the effects of the Affordable Care Act's federal-level dependent coverage expansion on young adults' labor market outcomes. I find that these reforms did effectively increase the reported holding of non-spousal dependent coverage, and initial results indicate a significant association with reduced labor force participation. However, further investigation reveals that the target population's relative withdrawal from the labor force began prior to the implementation of the insurance reform, and is likely driven by the economic recession. ii

Notes

Copyright - Copyright ProQuest, UMI Dissertations Publishing 2013 Last updated - 2014-01-21 First page - n/a

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Endnote Keywords

0501:Economics

Endnote ID

999999

Short TitleLabor outcomes of health shocks and dependent coverage expansions
Citation Key6237