The Impact of Private Health Knowledge on Insurance Markets
Imagine two different scenarios for a health insurance market. In Scenario A, neither the insurance company nor the individuals know who is likely to become ill; they only know the overall average risk for the entire population. The company offers one policy at a price based on this average. In Scenario B, individuals gain access to personal genetic tests that reveal their specific, individual health risks, but they are not required to share this information with the insurance company. The company still only knows the average risk for the population. Analyze the fundamental difference between these two scenarios. Specifically, explain how the change in who holds the information impacts the original premise of the insurance market.
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Adverse Selection in Health Insurance
Initially, a health insurance company and a population of potential customers share the same level of uncertainty about who will need expensive medical care in the future. The company offers a single policy to everyone at a premium based on the average expected cost for the whole group. A new, affordable, and private self-test is then introduced, allowing individuals to accurately determine their personal likelihood of needing this care, without any obligation to share the results. What is the most fundamental change to the market's dynamic caused by the introduction of this test?
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The Impact of Private Health Knowledge on Insurance Markets
Imagine a health insurance market where, initially, neither individuals nor the insurance company know who is at high or low risk for a specific costly condition. The insurer offers a single premium based on the population's average risk. A new, private, and affordable test becomes available that allows individuals to learn their personal risk level without having to share the results. Arrange the following events in the logical order they would occur after the test is introduced.
True or False: In a health insurance market where a new technology allows individuals to privately learn their personal health risks (information not available to the insurer), the market becomes more stable because the insurance company can continue to successfully offer a single, average-cost premium to the entire population.
The Information Shift in Insurance
A health insurance market can be characterized by the information available to buyers and sellers. Match each market characteristic below to the type of information environment it describes.
When a health insurance market transitions from a state where neither individuals nor insurers know specific future health needs to one where individuals can privately determine their own risk level, the market dynamic shifts from symmetric uncertainty to ____.
Evaluating the Impact of Private Health Information
An insurance company offers a health plan to a large population, with a single premium calculated on the assumption that the risk of a serious illness is randomly and unknownly distributed among all individuals. A new, widely available genetic test allows each person to privately learn their specific, individual risk for this illness. From the insurance company's perspective, what is the most direct and fundamental problem created by this development?
Imagine a health insurance market where, initially, neither individuals nor the insurance company know who is at high or low risk for a specific costly condition. The insurer offers a single premium based on the population's average risk. A new, private, and affordable test becomes available that allows individuals to learn their personal risk level without having to share the results. Arrange the following events in the logical order they would occur after the test is introduced.