Intergenerational Transfers under Community Rating

  • Title:

    Intergenerational Transfers under Community Rating
  • Format:

    Paperback
  • Paperback Price:

    9.95
  • Paperback ISBN:

    0844770337
  • Paperback Dimensions:

    5.5'' x 8.5''
  • 55 Paperback pages
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Government mandates and other regulations can achieve the effect of spending and tax-transfer programs--without being accounted for in the federal budget. In the 1993-1994 debate over health care reform, for example, it was widely recognized that requiring employers to provide insurance to their employees was the equivalent of a tax on employers to pay for a transfer to employees.

Less understood, however, is the transfer occurring from the proposal to require insurance companies to provide health insurance on a community-rated basis. As David F. Bradford and Derrick A. Max show in this volume, such a proposal would, in effect, transfer income from younger and future generations to older ones. According to their analysis, if insurers cannot consider age, gender, or health status in setting a price for their project, the effect would be comparable to a major change in on-budget tax legislation or redistributional transfer programs.

David F. Bradford is a professor of economics and public affairs at the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University.

Derrick A. Max is a professional staff economist for the Committee on Economic and Educational Opportunities of the U.S. House of Representatives.