cover image: Evaluating and Pricing Health Insurance in Lower-income Countries: A Field Experiment in India

20.500.12592/6t1g6r8

Evaluating and Pricing Health Insurance in Lower-income Countries: A Field Experiment in India

14 Mar 2024

Universal health coverage is a widely shared goal across lower-income countries. We conducted a large-scale, 4-year trial that randomized premiums and subsidies for India’s first national, public hospital insurance program, RSBY. We find roughly 60% uptake even when consumers were charged premiums equal to the government’s cost for insurance. We also find substantial adverse selection into insurance at positive prices. Insurance enrollment increases insurance utilization, partly due to spillovers from use of insurance by neighbors. However, many enrollees attempted to use insurance but failed, suggesting that learning is critical to the success of public insurance. We find very few statistically significant impacts of insurance access or enrollment on health. Because there is substantial willingness-to-pay for insurance, and given how distortionary it is to raise revenue in the Indian context, we calculate that our sample population should be charged a premium for RSBY between INR 500-1000 rather than a zero premium to maximize the marginal value of public funds.
health public economics financial economics development economics poverty and wellbeing health, education, and welfare economics of health

Authors

Anup Malani, Cynthia Kinnan, Gabriella Conti, Kosuke Imai, Morgen Miller, Shailender Swaminathan, Alessandra Voena, Bartosz Woda

Acknowledgements & Disclosure
This study was funded by the Department for International Development in the UK Government; the Tata Trusts through the Tata Centre for Development at the University of Chicago; the MacLean Center, the Becker-Friedman Institute, the Neubauer Collegium, and the Law School at the University of Chicago; the Sloan Foundation; SRM University; Northwestern University and the International Growth Centre. The views expressed herein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Bureau of Economic Research.
DOI
https://doi.org/10.3386/w32239
Published in
United States of America

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