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APES – Braga, 11 October 2013
Gianandrea Staffiero
(CRES-Universitat Pompeu Fabra-Matrix)
Aurora Garcia Gallego (Un. Jaume I)
Nikos Georgantzis (Un. Jaume I, Un. Granada)
Tarek Jaber López (Un. Jaume I)
Can Co-Payment CurbOver-Consumption?
Experimental Evidence
26/06/2013
Introduction
• When co-payment makes sense. Especially in healthcare.
• Policy and users’ trade-offs involved in consumption.
• Behavioural effects and experimental analysis of the effect of a small charge.
• Evolution of appropriation of common resources.
• Conclusions.
26/06/2013
The Rationale of Co-Payment (1)
26/06/2013 … (even Barcelona)
1. Reduction of public expenditures.• Good reason in financial troubles?• Transfer of resources to reduce public
deficit... From whom?• Is a transfer from (e.g.) healthcare users to
the State politically acceptable?• Equity implications? Are users richer? Are
users better-off in general?
The Rationale of Co-Payment (2)
26/06/2013 … (even Barcelona)
2. Rationalise demand and reduce over-consumption.• “Social optimum”:
marginal benefit = marginal cost• BUT: Users do not bear costs.
Over-consumption• Co-Payment goal: alignment of private
costs to social costs.
Caveats
• Outside the scope of this paper:
User information may be limited. User and decision-maker may not
coincide (e.g. Patient vs Prescriber). Short-term savings may imply long-
term costs.
Policy trade-off
• Policy-maker trade-off on co-payments:Equity: imposing a financial burden on the ill.
Efficiency: aligning costs and benefits.
• Very low benefits even small charges avoid over-use.
• Very high user charges risk of under-consumption.
Users’ trade-off
• Should I use the public good?• Individual incentive: YES.• Social welfare perspective: NO.• If Co-Payment = Marginal Costs, trade-off is
solved.• Political compromise may lead to preserving
• BC: 15 rounds as in B, then announcement of rules as in C.
Predictions
• Under standard payoff maximization assumptions, in the subgame perfect Nash equilibrium all members withdraw 10, every round, in all three treatments.
• Pareto inefficiency: they all end up with 10, whereas they would get 20 each cooperating.
Average extraction, by treatment
Common fund after extraction
Results
1. Withdrawals increase during the first 15 rounds.
Usually explained in terms of conditional cooperation.
2. No single round shows significant differences between B and BC.
The introduction of co-payment does not succeed in improving efficiency.
3. Withdrawals are lower in the C treatment.
If it’s there from the outset, the existence of a price does reduce over-consumption.
4. Withdrawals continue to increase in rounds B and BC, but not in C!
In C, increase is limited to the first few rounds. Then withdrawals levels remain more or less constant.
Results
Main findings
• People used to appropriate public goods does not refrain to do so after the introduction of a small charge that does not change individual incentives.
• On the other hand, there is no crowding-out: the presence of a price from the beginning does reduce appropriation.
Discussion
• A small price gives a hint towards refraining from the full appropriation of a common resource.
• Having a resource for free spoils the effectiveness of small charges in curbing over-consumption.
• Further research: Stochastic benefits Inequality and co-payment