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Recursos bibliográficos en papel y digitales - - libros, artículos de revistas,
ponencias de eventos, etc. -
» Resultado:
8 registros
Registro 1 de 8 |
Autor: |
Cutler, David-M - McClellan, Mark - Newhouse, Joseph-P - |
Título: |
What Has Increased Medical-Care Spending Bought? |
Fuente: |
American Economic Review. v.88, n.2. American Economic Association |
Páginas: |
pp. 132-36 |
Año: |
May 1998 |
Solicitar por: |
HEMEROTECA A + datos de Fuente |
Registro 2 de 8 |
Autor: |
Newhouse, Joseph-P - |
Título: |
Reimbursing Health Plans and Health Providers: Efficiency in Production versus Selection |
Fuente: |
Journal of Economic Literature. v.34, n.3. American Economic Association |
Páginas: |
pp. 1236-63 |
Año: |
Sept. 1996 |
Resumen: |
The tradeoff between an insurer’s or medical provider’s incentives to select good risks and to produce efficiently is governed by the supply-price analog to the demand-price tradeoff between moral hazard and risk aversion. Under a variety of models the optimum supply price is a mixture of capitation and fee-for-service payments. Empirical literature shows that pure capitation payment leaves strong incentives for selection that are acted upon. The presence of contracting costs in a Rothschild-Stiglitz model means a limited pooling equilibrium can exist and that poor risks will not be at their preferred outcome. |
Solicitar por: |
HEMEROTECA J + datos de Fuente |
Registro 3 de 8 |
Autor: |
Newhouse, Joseph-P - |
Título: |
Policy Watch: Medicare |
Fuente: |
Journal of Economic Perspectives. v.10, n.3. American Economic Association |
Páginas: |
pp. 159-67 |
Año: |
summer 1996 |
Resumen: |
The forecast growth for Medicare spending has created a highly visible budgetary impasse between the president and Congress. Both favor the growth of health plans that accept risk and would promote them by creating less restrictive options than heretofore. Nonetheless, the conference bill the president vetoed for other reasons did not envision price competition among plans but relied upon administered prices instead. The bill allowed Medical Savings Accounts; because of selection, the Congressional Budget Office estimated they would slightly increase Medicare costs. By eliminating the subsidy at the margin to hiring a resident, the bill’s provisions would shift demand for residents down. |
Solicitar por: |
HEMEROTECA J + datos de Fuente |
Registro 4 de 8 |
Autor: |
Newhouse, Joseph-P - |
Título: |
Symposium on Health Care Reform |
Fuente: |
Journal of Economic Perspectives. v.8, n.3. American Economic Association |
Páginas: |
pp. 3-11 |
Año: |
summer 1994 |
Resumen: |
The papers in this symposium focus on two major issues of health economics in the context of President Clinton’s Health Security Act: cost containment and labor market effects of financing insurance. The act proposes to limit public and private spending; a key issue is the extent to which, without a limit but with a standardized basic plan, supplementary insurance will exist to allow scope for individual choice. The act’s financing will have an ambiguous effect on labor supply but will encourage formation of small, low-wage firms. Several features, including community rating and standardization of dependent coverage, imply substantial redistribution. |
Solicitar por: |
HEMEROTECA J + datos de Fuente |
Registro 5 de 8 |
Autor: |
Newhouse, Joseph-P - |
Título: |
Distinguished Fellow: In Honor of Victor Fuchs |
Fuente: |
Journal of Economic Perspectives. v.6, n.3. American Economic Association |
Páginas: |
pp. 179-89 |
Año: |
summer 1992 |
Solicitar por: |
HEMEROTECA J + datos de Fuente |
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