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Solidarity in competitive markets for voluntary health insurance. Francesco Paolucci, Femmeke Prinsze, Piet Stam & Wynand van de Ven iBMG-Institute of Health Policy and Management Erasmus University Rotterdam Paolucci@bmg.eur.nl Thursday 21 April 2005 Civitas Health Policy Roundtable
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Solidarity in competitive markets for voluntary health insurance Francesco Paolucci, Femmeke Prinsze, Piet Stam & Wynand van de Ven iBMG-Institute of Health Policy and Management Erasmus University Rotterdam Paolucci@bmg.eur.nl Thursday 21 April 2005 Civitas Health Policy Roundtable Novotel Den Haag Centrum
World-wide trend • Health care expenditures are growing while financing based on Mandatory Health Insurance (MHI) cannot grow accordingly. • Many countries are considering the option to rely increasingly on Voluntary Health Insurance (VHI) schemes. • This trend causes widespread concerns regarding a potential loss of solidarity, in terms of access to insurance coverage.
Solidarity • Solidarity = Cross-subsidization. • Risk-solidarity: from low-risks to high-risks. • Income-solidarity: from high-income groups to low-income groups.
MHI • Competitive mandatory health insurance (MHI) guarantee some Income- & Risk-Solidarity via regulations, such as: • Compulsory enrollment for certain (categories of) individuals; • Risk-adjustment system; • Open enrollment; • Community-rated premiums (CRP).
VHI • Voluntary (supplementary) health insurance markets are competitive and unregulated in most countries. • Unregulated competitive insurance markets cannot sustain implicit cross-subsidies because competition minimizes the predictable profits per contract (=Equivalence). • They tend to Risk-Rated Premiums (RRP).
The Dutch case • In the Netherlands (2004), many benefits were transferred from MHI to VHI. • Currently, VHI providers self-regulate by adopting more or less community-rated premiums (CRP) which result in some Risk-Solidarity. • But in the long term, the transition from MHI to VHI implies a loss of Risk-Solidarity given that VHI providers will (CRP) RRP.
Objective • Provide an empirical illustration of the consequences for Risk-solidarity of the transition from CRP to RRP in the VHI market; • Discuss the available alternatives to maintain a “socially acceptable” level of solidarity, if desired, in VHI markets.
Method • Simulation of scenarios in which benefits covered by MHI are transferred to VHI; • Calculation of CRP and RRP (premium range) for each simulated benefit package; • Analysis of the implications for solidarity in the market for VHI.
Data • Administrative data issued by the largest Sickness Fund in the Netherlands (AGIS, 2002); • N=1.5 million; • Analysis with 0.5 million individuals with identical package.
Graph I Max RRP Risk Rated Premiums CRP Min RRP Age
Graph Max RRP for DCG individuals DCG Min RRP for DCG individuals Max RRP Risk Rated Premiums Max RRP for Non-DCG individuals CRP no DCG Min RRP Min RRP for Non-DCG individuals Age
Benefits Risk-factors Current VHI Complete VHI Results Demographic model CRP= 75* Min RRP= 6 Max RRP= 125 CRP= 75 Min RRP= 6 Max RRP= 135 CRP= 75 Min RRP= 6 Max RRP= 130 CRP= 538 Min RRP= 146 Max RRP= 1276 Demographic + DCGs CRP= 538 Min RRP= 138 Max RRP=2581 Demographic + PCGs CRP= 538 Min RRP= 132 Max RRP= 2302 Demographic + DCGs + PCGs CRP= 538 Min RRP= 127 Max RRP= 3239 * Units in euros per month CRP= 75 Min RRP= 6 Max RRP= 138
Conclusions • If benefits MHI VHI coverage RRP more probable in the long-run; • CRP RRP in VHI markets implies a substantial increase in the premium range for the complete VHI benefit package; • This implies a reduction of Risk-solidarity, of which Policy makers should be aware when transferring benefits from MHI to VHI; • If Society considers this reduction too high, the preferred alternative to maintain an “acceptable level of Risk-solidarity” in a VHI is by implementing a system of “explicit premium subsidies” (van de Ven et al. , JHE, 2000).
Issues for discussion • If Risk-Solidarity is required, should the coverage be Mandatory or Voluntary? • After the change from CRP to RRP, is VHI still a tool for cream-skimming?