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Erschienen in: International Journal of Health Economics and Management 1/2023

06.07.2022 | Research article

The union advantage: union membership, access to care, and the Affordable Care Act

verfasst von: Luke Petach, David K. Wyant

Erschienen in: International Journal of Health Economics and Management | Ausgabe 1/2023

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Abstract

We describe a “union advantage” in health insurance coverage and access to care. Using multiple statistical models and data from the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey for 1996–2019, we show that—compared to non-union workers—union workers are more likely to have health insurance coverage (98% vs. 86%), more likely to have a regular care provider (83% vs. 74%), visited office-based providers 31% more often (5.64 vs. 4.27 visits), spend $832 more on healthcare annually, and pay a lower share of their expenditures out-of-pocket (26% vs. 37%). When we control for demographic characteristics across variety of specifications, these differences almost always remain at a statistically significant level. Further, we show that the union advantage is greater for low-income workers. Next, we demonstrate that—although the Affordable Care Act (ACA) appears to have reduced the union advantage in health insurance coverage by increasing coverage rates among non-union workers—a substantial union advantage in access to care remains after the ACA’s main provisions become effective. Finally, we explore how the ACA interacted with the trade union  goal of maintaining employer-based health insurance. We show that unionized workers are less likely to contribute to “enrollment shifting,” which occurs when individuals shift from existing employer-based insurance to a new government funded program. This suggests that union bargaining over fringe benefits may have positive externalities in the form of cost reductions to the public sector.
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Fußnoten
1
The normative justification for these coverage disparities appears to be tenuous at best, given the accidental fashion in which the United States came to rely on employer-sponsored health insurance (e.g., as a response by employers to wage- and price-controls imposed during World War II, see Thomasson, 2002 and Buchmueller and Monheit, 2009).
 
2
Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics (2022).
 
3
More recently, Health Savings Accounts offer a triple advantage, earnings on the account are exempt from taxes.
 
4
Morrisey’s third reason the United States came to rely on employer-sponsored health insurance was as a response by employers to wage- and price-controls imposed during World War II, (see also Thomasson, 2002 and Buchmueller and Monheit, 2009). The normative justification for coverage disparities appears to be tenuous at best, given the accidental fashion in which the United States came to rely on employer-sponsored health insurance. Starr ( 2017) suggests the health care system evolved, like other social structures, as an outcome of historical processes in which particular structures are created because individuals pursue their interests and ideals within larger arenas of social and political power. Unions make Starr’s short list of important actors in both the process of financing health care and the process of providing access to health care to please their constituents.
 
5
For a discussion of the health production function see Feldstein (2012).
 
6
Households which reported either “yes,” “no,” or for which the IPUMS MEPS reports that union status was “determined in previous round.”.
 
7
Nyman 1999 suggests that in addition to value from insurance due to avoiding risk of financial loss, health insurance is demanded because it is a mechanism for gaining access to health care that would otherwise be unaffordable. Thus Nyman the economist and Andersen the sociologist are both considering that health insurance adds value because it creates the potential for access.
 
8
Of the 130,134 individuals included in the sample, 1,887 experience a change in union status over the two periods of observation. 881 individuals exit a union and 1,006 individuals become union members. Because individual-specific fixed-effects absorb any time-invariant individual-specific heterogeneity, the regression co-efficient obtained from estimating Eq. (1’) will be driven entirely by the variation in union status stemming from those 1,887 individuals who experience a change in union status from 1 year to the next.
 
9
Survey respondents are indicated as residing in one of four Census Regions, comprised of the following states. South: Alabama, Arkansas, Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, and West Virginia. Northeast: Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, and Vermont. Midwest: Indiana, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota, and Wisconsin. West: Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming.
 
10
For example, Davison, Call and Blewett (2004) cite 2001 and 2002 CPS data that indicates 18% of the individuals under 100% of the poverty level have employer sponsored health insurance (ESI) and 84% of the individual earning over 300% of poverty have ESI.
 
11
Full regression results available upon request. Note that all individual-specific time-invariant controls (sex, race, etc.) will be washed out of regression specifications including individual-fixed effects.
 
12
When individual-fixed effects are included in the count-data models, we make use of the “ppmlhdfe” package in Stata, which implements Poisson pseudo-maximum likelihood regressions with multi-way fixed effects as described in Correia, Guimaraes, and Zylkin (2020).
 
13
Additional trend plots presented in Appendix A.
 
14
For a two-person household in 2021 this corresponds to a total family income of approximately $70,000. This definition corresponds to the “high income” category in the IPUMS-MEPS variable “povcat.”.
 
15
Goldstein and Pauly (1976) suggest that group health insurance could be viewed as a “local public good.” In other words, each covered individual has the same unlimited access to benefits. Viewed in this light, an attempt to trade health benefits for wages would be putting restrictions on those individuals who most used the public good.
 
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Metadaten
Titel
The union advantage: union membership, access to care, and the Affordable Care Act
verfasst von
Luke Petach
David K. Wyant
Publikationsdatum
06.07.2022
Verlag
Springer US
Erschienen in
International Journal of Health Economics and Management / Ausgabe 1/2023
Print ISSN: 2199-9023
Elektronische ISSN: 2199-9031
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10754-022-09336-7

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