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Why Did the Ssi-Disabled Program Grow so Much? Disentangling the Effect of Medicaid


Aaron Yelowitz


University of Kentucky - Department of Economics

August 1997

NBER Working Paper No. w6139

Abstract:     
The number of participants in the SSI program grew by 1.1 million from 1987 to 1993. This paper examines the role of Medicaid on the SSI participation decision. I use the rapid growth in average Medicaid expenditure as a proxy for its value. OLS estimates of Medicaid's effect may be biased because of omitted variables bias and measurement error. I therefore apply two-stage least squares to estimate Medicaid's effect, using average Medicaid expenditure for blind SSI recipients as an instrument. These estimates show that rising Medicaid expenditure significantly increased SSI participation among adults with low permanent incomes, explaining 20 percent of the growth.

Number of Pages in PDF File: 49

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Date posted: May 25, 2006  

Suggested Citation

Yelowitz, Aaron, Why Did the Ssi-Disabled Program Grow so Much? Disentangling the Effect of Medicaid (August 1997). NBER Working Paper No. w6139. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=225902

Contact Information

Aaron Yelowitz (Contact Author)
University of Kentucky - Department of Economics ( email )
Lexington, KY 40506
United States
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