Impacts of Universal Health Coverage: A Micro-founded Macroeconomic Perspective
Yoshino, Xianguo Huang and Naoyuki | June 2015
Abstract
This paper studies the impact of tax-financed universal health coverage schemes on macroeconomic aspects of labor supply, asset holding, inequality, and welfare, while taking into account features common to developing economies, such as informal employment and tax avoidance, by constructing a dynamic stochastic general equilibrium model with heterogeneous agents. Agents have different education levels, employment statuses, and idiosyncratic shocks. Given three tax financing options, calibration results suggest that the financing options matter for outcomes both at the aggregate and disaggregate levels. Universal health coverage, financed by labor income tax revenue, could reduce inequality due to its large redistributive role. Social welfare cannot be improved when labor decisions are endogenous and distortions are higher than the redistributive gains for all tax financing options. In the absence of labor supply choice, mild welfare gains are found.
Citation
Yoshino, Xianguo Huang and Naoyuki. 2015. Impacts of Universal Health Coverage: A Micro-founded Macroeconomic Perspective. © Asian Development Bank Institute. http://hdl.handle.net/11540/9651.Keywords
Health Care Financing
Financial Security
Financial Assistance
Aged Health
Health Care System
Health Care Policy
Access to Health Care
Public Expenditure
Insurance Companies
Fiscal Administration
Medical Costs
Aid Financing
Pension Funds
Medical Costs
Health Costs
Rural Population
Urban Population
Public Health Finance
Health Financing
Health Care Financing
Financial Policy
Health Sector Reform
Health Care Cost Control
Multiemployer pension plans
Keogh plans
Individual retirement accounts
Pension plans
Employee pension trusts
Pension trusts
Nursing homes
Long-term care facilities
Hospices
Accounts payable
Vouchers
Insurance carriers
Medicines
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