Technological Change and Risk Adjustment: Benefit Design Incentives in Medicare Part D

41 Pages Posted: 25 Mar 2014 Last revised: 24 Nov 2015

See all articles by Colleen Marie Carey

Colleen Marie Carey

Cornell University - Department of Policy Analysis and Management

Date Written: June 28, 2015

Abstract

Subsidized health insurance markets use diagnosis-based risk adjustment to induce insurers to offer an equitable benefit to individuals of varying expected cost. I demonstrate that technological change after risk adjustment calibration -- new drug entry and the onset of generic competition -- made certain diagnoses profitable or unprofitable in Medicare Part D. I then exploit variation in diagnoses' profitability driven by technological change to show insurers designed more favorable benefits for drugs that treat profitable diagnoses as compared to unprofitable diagnoses. In the presence of technological change, risk adjustment may not fully neutralize insurers' incentives to select through benefit designs.

Keywords: health insurance markets, health insurance regulation, benefit design, risk adjustment

JEL Classification: I11, I18, L51

Suggested Citation

Carey, Colleen Marie, Technological Change and Risk Adjustment: Benefit Design Incentives in Medicare Part D (June 28, 2015). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2413993 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2413993

Colleen Marie Carey (Contact Author)

Cornell University - Department of Policy Analysis and Management ( email )

Ithaca, NY
United States

Do you have negative results from your research you’d like to share?

Paper statistics

Downloads
148
Abstract Views
850
Rank
359,533
PlumX Metrics