Strategies for Financing National Health Insurance: Who Wins and Who Loses
- 14 October 1976
- journal article
- Published by Massachusetts Medical Society in New England Journal of Medicine
- Vol. 295 (16) , 866-871
- https://doi.org/10.1056/nejm197610142951605
Abstract
Two sources of funds are available to underwrite the costs of any national health-insurance plan: prepayments (premiums, payroll taxes and income taxes) and out-of-pocket payments (coinsurance and deductibles). The extent to which taxes rather than premiums are used to finance an insurance program will be the major determinant of how large a share of the costs of health care will be borne by higher-income groups. The extent to which coinsurance and deductible provisions are reduced or waived for low-income persons will have a less important, but still substantial, role in determining how the costs of a program are distributed. These financing principles, once understood, provide a basis for the design of health-insurance legislation that will achieve any pattern of income redistribution that may be desired.Keywords
This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- National Health Insurance: Some Costs and Effects of Mandated Employee CoverageJournal of Political Economy, 1976
- The Financing of National Health InsuranceScience, 1976
- Health and Taxes: An Assessment of the Medical DeductionSouthern Economic Journal, 1975
- Policy Options and the Impact of National Health InsuranceNew England Journal of Medicine, 1974