Chapter 12 Social Insurance
Chapter 12 Social Insurance
Chapter 12 Social Insurance
Jonathan Gruber Public Finance and Public Policy Aaron S. Yelowitz - Copyright 2005 © Worth
Publishers
2 Introduction There has been a radical change in the nature and scope of government spending
in the last half century. A set of programs known as social insurance programs have become a
much larger share of the federal budget. Figure 1 illustrates this.
4 Introduction Some of the more important social insurance programs include: Social Security
Unemployment Insurance Disability Insurance Workers’ Compensation Medicare
Moral hazard: when you insure individuals against adverse events, you can encourage adverse
behavior.
What Is Insurance?
Insurance has a common structure: Individuals pay money to an insurer, called an insurance
premium. In return, the insurer promises to make some payment to the insured party (or those
providing services) if an adverse event occurs. Obvious examples include health insurance,
automobile insurance, life insurance, and casualty and property insurance.
25 Asymmetric Information
For example, in the health insurance market, it is likely that the person buying coverage knows
more about his health problems and expected utilization than does the insurance company. The
insurer will be reluctant to sell the person a policy at an actuarially fair price, since they are
likely to be a “high risk.”
26 Asymmetric Information
Assume there are 2 groups, each with 100 people. The first group has 5% chance of getting
injured, and the second group has a 0.5% chance. The payout is $30,000 when injured. Table 2
shows how information affects the insurance market in this context.
28 Asymmetric Information
This example illustrates how the problem of adverse selection plagues the insurance market.
People have the option of buying insurance, and will only do so if it is a fair deal for them. Only
the high risks take-up the policy so it loses money.