Friday, July 24, 2009

Behavioural Health Economics

This is from a little while ago - happy to chair a journal club if anyone interested.

Jeffrey Liebman, Richard Zeckhauser

NBER Working Paper No. 14330
Issued in September 2008
NBER Program(s): HC HE PE
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---- Abstract -----

The behavioral revolution in economics has demonstrated that human beings often have difficulty making wise choices. The most widely chronicled difficulties arise for decisions made under conditions of uncertainty, those whose consequences unfold over significant amounts of time, and decisions made in complex environments. Unfortunately, these are precisely the elements involved when individuals choose a health insurance policy, or decide whether to consume health care services. In this paper, we argue that traditional economic models of insurance are woefully insufficient for analyzing the tradeoffs inherent when giving consumers responsibility for making health care choices. We show that behavioral economics provides a stronger normative justification for many features of our existing health care policy than do the models of traditional economics. We then demonstrate that policy analyses of the wide range of subsidies that permeate the health care system change substantially when viewed from the behavioral perspective. In closing, we discuss how recent policy trends can be fruitfully assessed using a behavioral lens.

1 comment:

Peter Carney said...

I reviewed this paper before- some interesting ideas that would make for a good journal club alright.