Font Size: a A A

Essays on Incentives, Moral Hazard and Optimal Polic

Posted on:2019-07-30Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:Princeton UniversityCandidate:Schlockermann, JakobFull Text:PDF
GTID:1479390017493946Subject:Economics
Abstract/Summary:
This collection of essays studies incentives and public policy in health care and labor markets. Chapter 1 investigates the causal effect of financial incentives on hospital discharge decisions. Making use of a kink in the German reimbursement system for hospitals, I employ a bunching design to tightly bound the effect of marginal pay on patients' length of stay around zero. I discuss how the contrast between my result and the previous evidence is explained by differences in the institutional setting. In Chapter 2, I provide new evidence which improves our understanding of provider as well as patient behavior in response to incentives in health care. In particular, I show that a well-known piece of evidence in favor of moral hazard on the patient side with respect to health insurance coverage is better interpreted as limited attention behavior by doctors. Chapter 3 turns towards labor markets. It studies the impacts of heterogeneity in earnings potential on the optimal design of unemployment insurance and estimates the newly relevant parameters empirically.
Keywords/Search Tags:Incentives
Related items