ShanghaiTech SEM Working Paper No. 2019-004
Hanming Fang
University of Pennsylvania, ShanghaiTech University
Andrew Shephard
University of Pennsylvania
Health insurance in the United States for the working age population has traditionally been provided in the form of employer-sponsored health insurance (ESHI). If employers offered ESHI to their employees, they also typically extended coverage to their spouse and dependents. Provisions in the Affordable Care Act (ACA) significantly alter the incentive for firms to offer insurance to the spouses of employees. We evaluate the long-run impact of the ACA on firms’ insurance offerings and on household outcomes by developing and estimating an equilibrium job search model in which multiple household members are searching for jobs. The distribution of job offers is determined endogenously, with compensation packages consisting of a wage and menu of insurance offerings (premiums and coverage) that workers select from. Using our estimated model we find that households’ valuation of employersponsored spousal health insurance is significantly reduced under the ACA, and with an“employee-only”health insurance contract emerging among low productivity firms. We relate these outcomes to the specific provisions in the ACA.hanghaiTech University
Keywords: Health, Health Insurance, Labor Market Equilibrium, Household Search
Date Written: October, 2019
Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3470001
Download this paper: 【No. 2019-004】Household Labor Search, Spousal Insurance, and Health Care Reform.pdf