Search Costs and Medicare Plan Choice

Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Can’t use the file because of accessibility barriers? Contact us with the title of the item, permanent link, and specifics of your accommodation need.

Date

2008-04-03

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Center for Applied Economics and Policy Research

Abstract

There is increasing evidence suggesting that Medicare beneficiaries do not make fully informed decisions when choosing among alternative Medicare health plans. To the extent that deciphering the intricacies of alternative plans consumes time and money, the Medicare health plan market is one in which search costs may play an important role. To account for this, we split beneficiaries into two groups--those who are informed and those who are uninformed. If uninformed, beneficiaries only use a subset of covariates to compute their maximum utilities, and if informed, they use the full set of variables considered. In a Bayesian framework with Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) methods, we estimate search cost coefficients based on the minimum and maximum statistics of the search cost distribution, incorporating both horizontal differentiation and information heterogeneities across eligibles. Our results suggest that, conditional on being uninformed, older, higher income beneficiaries with lower self-reported health status are more likely to utilize easier access to information.

Description

Keywords

CAEPR, Center for Applied Economics and Policy Research, Search, Medicare Health Plan Choice, Discrete Choice Models, Bayesian Methods, Consumer Search, Econometrics

Citation

Journal

DOI

Link(s) to data and video for this item

This paper is also available on SSRN and RePEc.

Relation

Rights

Type

Working Paper