Reforming the Tax Preference for Employer Health Insurance

2012 ◽  
Vol 26 (1) ◽  
pp. 43-58 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joseph Bankman ◽  
John Cogan ◽  
R. Glenn Hubbard ◽  
Daniel P. Kessler
Author(s):  
Jack Hadley ◽  
James D. Reschovsky

This paper explores the decisions by small business establishments (<100 workers) to offer health insurance. We estimate a theoretically derived model of establishments' demand for insurance using nationally representative data from the 1997 Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Employer Health Insurance Survey and other sources. Findings show that offer decisions reflect worker demand, labor market conditions, and establishments' costs of providing coverage. Premiums have a moderate effect on offer decisions (elasticity = –.54), though very small establishments and those employing low-wage workers are more responsive. This suggests that premium subsidies to employers would be an inefficient means of increasing insurance coverage. Greater availability of public insurance and safety net care has a small negative effect on offer decisions.


Author(s):  
Sara R. Collins Collins ◽  
Cathy Schoen Schoen ◽  
David C. Radley Radley ◽  
Sophie Beutel Beutel

Author(s):  
James D. Reschovsky ◽  
Jack Hadley ◽  
Len Nichols

This paper investigates low rates of employer health insurance coverage among Hispanics using national data from the Community Tracking Study Household Survey. Interview language served as a proxy for the degree of assimilation. Findings indicate that English-speaking Hispanics are more similar to whites in their labor market experiences and coverage than they are to Spanish-speaking Hispanics. Spanish-speakers' very low human capital (including their inability to speak English) results in much less access to job-based insurance. Though less important, Spanish-speaking Hispanics' demand for employer-sponsored insurance appears lower than that of English-speaking Hispanics or whites. Results suggest that language and job training may be the most effective way to bolster Hispanics' insurance coverage.


2011 ◽  
Vol 27 (sup2) ◽  
pp. 5-11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leslie Montejano ◽  
Rahul Sasané ◽  
Paul Hodgkins ◽  
Leo Russo ◽  
Daniel Huse

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