2025 General Seminar no.21-Dr Karen Kopecky (Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland)

Welfare-Enhancing Public and Private Insurance Arrangements for Long-Term Care Risk

by Dr Karen Kopecky

Abstract: Long-term care is costly. About one in three Americans will experience a stay in a nursing home that exceeds 100 days during their lifetime, and about one in ten will incur out-of-pocket expenses of $200,000 or more. Surprisingly, only about 10% of retirees have private long-term care insurance. Private insurers incur high administrative costs and must contend with private information. Medicaid offers means-tested benefits for those with low assets. However, Medicaid is a secondary payer that only provides coverage after private insurance benefits have been exhausted. These two features crowd out demand for private insurance and retirees pay a large share of long-term care expenses out-of-pocket. We consider alternative strategies for reforming public and private insurance for long-term care risk in an optimal contracting model and find that making Medicaid a primary payer while retaining the means test performs best. This reform stimulates the private long-term care insurance market while preserving the safety net provided by public insurance to low-income individuals. Social welfare increases even though government expenditures fall.

Details
Start Date
End Date
Venue
Fred Gruen Economics Seminar Room (H.W.Arndt Bldg 25A)
Presenter(s)
Dr Karen Kopecky (Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland)