Published on 01 January 2023 |
ECIN Replication Package for "Adverse Selection in the Group Life Insurance Market"
View DatasetDescription
These files contain code and the publicly available data used for the study titled "Adverse Selection in the Group Life Insurance Market." Abstract for the study:
The employer-sponsored life insurance (ESLI) market is particularly susceptible to adverse selection due to community-rated premiums, guaranteed issue coverage, and the existence of a well-functioning individual market as a substitute. Using administrative payroll and healthcare claims data from a large university, we find evidence of adverse selection in the supplemental ESLI market. Employees in worse health, as measured by the Charlson's Comorbidity Index, are more likely to elect coverage than those in better health. Nonetheless, we also find that employees typically do not increase coverage following diagnosis of a severe illness even when they can without providing evidence of insurability. Furthermore, demand estimation shows that employees are not price-sensitive and that the estimated increases in premiums due to adverse selection are unlikely to cause significant welfare loss.
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Publication Details
DOI
Publisher
ICPSR - Interuniversity Consortium for Political and Social Research
Subfield
Economics and Econometrics
Field
Economics, Econometrics and Finance
Domain
Social Sciences
Confidence Score
44%
Source
Scholar Data Model