Estimating the price elasticity of expenditure for prescription drugs in the presence of non‐linear price schedules: an illustration from Quebec, Canada
- 26 August 2005
- journal article
- econometrics and-health-economics
- Published by Wiley in Health Economics
- Vol. 14 (9) , 909-923
- https://doi.org/10.1002/hec.1041
Abstract
The price elasticity of demand for prescription drugs is a crucial parameter of interest in designing pharmaceutical benefit plans. Estimating the elasticity using micro-data, however, is challenging because insurance coverage that includes deductibles, co-insurance provisions and maximum expenditure limits create a non-linear price schedule, making price endogenous (a function of drug consumption). In this paper we exploit an exogenous change in cost-sharing within the Quebec (Canada) public Pharmacare program to estimate the price elasticity of expenditure for drugs using IV methods. This approach corrects for the endogeneity of price and incorporates the concept of a ‘rational’ consumer who factors into consumption decisions the price they expect to face at the margin given their expected needs. The IV method is adapted from an approach developed in the public finance literature used to estimate income responses to changes in tax schedules. The instrument is based on the price an individual would face under the new cost-sharing policy if their consumption remained at the pre-policy level. Our preferred specification leads to expenditure elasticities that are in the low range of previous estimates (between −0.12 and −0.16). Naïve OLS estimates are between 1 and 4 times these magnitudes. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Effect of Income Taxes on Household IncomeThe Review of Economics and Statistics, 1999
- Patient charges and the utilisation of nhs prescription medicines: Some estimates using a cointegration procedureHealth Economics, 1995
- Charging for health care: Evidence on the utilisation of NHS prescribed drugsSocial Science & Medicine, 1991
- The effect of patient charges on the utilisation of prescription medicinesJournal of Health Economics, 1989
- A new method of classifying prognostic comorbidity in longitudinal studies: Development and validationJournal of Chronic Diseases, 1987
- The Econometrics of Piecewise-Linear Budget Constraints: A Survey and Exposition of the Maximum Likelihood MethodJournal of Business & Economic Statistics, 1986
- Rational Behavior in the Presence of Coverage Ceilings and DeductiblesThe RAND Journal of Economics, 1986
- The Econometrics of Nonlinear Budget SetsEconometrica, 1985
- The demand for prescription drugs as a function of cost-sharingSocial Science & Medicine, 1985
- Deductibles and the Demand for Medical Care Services: The Theory of a Consumer Facing a Variable Price Schedule under UncertaintyEconometrica, 1977