Deck 7: The Economics of Health Care

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Question
The overall mortality rate in the United States has remained fairly constant for the past 35 years.
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Question
In the United States in 2016, the percentage of people with private health insurance was about

A)17%.
B)29%.
C)56%.
D)83%.
Question
How can changes over time of the average height of the people in a country help to indicate the standard of living in a country?
Question
In the United States in 2016, the percentage of people without any form of health insurance was about

A)9%.
B)29%.
C)64%.
D)83%.
Question
In the United States from 1981 to 2015, deaths from all of the following declined substantially except

A)cancer.
B)kidney disease.
C)heart attacks.
D)strokes.
Question
Life expectancy at birth in the United States has more than doubled since 1850.
Question
Better health allows people to work harder, which raises a country's total income.This indicates that in effect, better health

A)is a primary cause of price increases.
B)reduces the incentive to work.
C)shifts out a country's production possibilities frontier.
D)increases consumer surplus.
Question
In the United States from 1981 to 2015, deaths from diabetes increased largely due to the effects of

A)foreign-produced insulin.
B)stress in the workplace.
C)a larger immigrant population.
D)increasing obesity.
Question
In the United States in 2016, the percentage of people who received health insurance through a government program was about

A)10%.
B)16%.
C)36%.
D)64%.
Question
Between 1981 and 2015, the overall mortality rate in the United States

A)decreased by more than 25 percent.
B)slowly but steadily increased.
C)remained fairly constant.
D)was similar to the average rate in most low-income countries.
Question
Changes in the health of the average person are an important indicator of changes in the standard of living.
Question
Briefly describe the most important differences between the market for health care and the market for other goods and services.
Question
On average, people in high-income countries ________ than people in low-income countries.

A)have a shorter life expectancy
B)are subject to a higher infant mortality rate
C)are taller
D)are exposed to more severe diseases
Question
Between 1981 and 2015, deaths from cancer have increased in the United States.
Question
In the United States, doctors and hospitals that provide most health care are

A)primarily private firms.
B)primarily employed by the government.
C)split evenly between private firms and employed by the government.
D)100 percent employed by the government.
Question
A typical consumer of health care in the United States

A)pays the full price of his or her health care.
B)pays more than the full price of his or her health care.
C)does not pay any of the price of his or her health care.
D)does not pay the full price of his or her health care.
Question
How can improvements in health increase a country's total income?
Question
The overall decline in death rates in the United States since 1981 was due to all of the following except

A)a decline in smoking.
B)the decline in the population.
C)the availability of new prescription drugs.
D)new surgical techniques.
Question
Health care makes up ________ of the U.S.economy.

A)about 2 percent
B)roughly 8 percent
C)more than one-sixth
D)almost two-thirds
Question
Over the past 165 years in the United States, life expectancy

A)has remained fairly constant.
B)has slightly declined.
C)has more than doubled.
D)increased up to the 1950s and then declined for the next 60 years.
Question
The largest government-run health care system in the world, with 1.4 million employees, is in

A)Canada.
B)Japan.
C)the United Kingdom.
D)the United States.
Question
In which of the following countries are substantial co-payments typically required as a part of the health care system?

A)Canada and the United States
B)Japan and Canada.
C)the United States and Japan
D)the United States and the United Kingdom
Question
Of the following high-income countries, which has the lowest mortality ratio for cancer?

A)Canada
B)Japan
C)the United Kingdom
D)the United States
Question
Of the following high-income countries, which has the lowest life expectancy at birth?

A)Canada
B)Japan
C)the United Kingdom
D)the United States
Question
In the United States in 2016, the percentage of firms that employed more than 200 workers and offered health insurance as a fringe benefit to the workers was about

A)29%.
B)42%.
C)61%.
D)98%.
Question
In the United States in 2016, more than seventy percent of those who were not covered by health insurance

A)are single and unemployed.
B)live in families in which at least one member has a job.
C)live in families in which all members are unemployed.
D)are retired from the workforce.
Question
A contract under which a buyer agrees to make payments in exchange for the provider agreeing to pay some or all of the buyer's medical bills is referred to as

A)a fee-for-service plan.
B)the Affordable Care Act.
C)a deductible.
D)health insurance.
Question
Typically, the higher the level of income per person in a country, the higher the level of spending per person on health care.This relationship between income and spending indicates that health care is a

A)normal good.
B)inferior good.
C)luxury.
D)necessity.
Question
The health care system in the United Kingdom is referred to as ________, under which the government owns most of the hospitals and employs most of the doctors.

A)an out-of-pocket system
B)a single-payer health care system
C)a universal health insurance system
D)socialized medicine
Question
In the United States in 2016, the percentage of people that directly purchased an individual or family health insurance policy from an insurance company was about

A)2%.
B)7%.
C)17%.
D)26%.
Question
The health care system in Canada is referred to as ________, and is a system in which the government provides national health insurance to all Canadian residents.

A)an out-of-pocket system
B)a single-payer health care system
C)a universal health insurance system
D)socialized medicine
Question
In the United States in 2016, of those companies employing more than 200 workers that offer health care to those workers, ________ of employees accept the coverage.

A)about 10 percent
B)roughly 36 percent
C)fewer than two-thirds
D)almost 98 percent
Question
Of the following high-income countries, which has the highest infant mortality rate?

A)Canada
B)Japan
C)the United Kingdom
D)the United States
Question
In the United States, health care spending per person is ________ the average for most other countries, even taking into account the effects of higher income per person.

A)slightly lower than
B)significantly higher than
C)significantly lower than
D)comparable to
Question
Most doctors and hospitals operate as private businesses in all of the following countries except

A)Canada.
B)Japan.
C)the United Kingdom.
D)the United States.
Question
Health insurance typically pays for most preventive care procedures in all of the following countries except

A)Canada.
B)Japan.
C)the United Kingdom.
D)the United States.
Question
In the United States in 2016, the percentage of firms that employed between 3 and 199 workers and offered health insurance as a fringe benefit to the workers was about

A)29%.
B)42%.
C)55%.
D)98%.
Question
The health care system in Japan is referred to as ________, under which every resident of Japan is required to enroll in either a private, or the government-provided, health insurance program.

A)an out-of-pocket system
B)a single-payer health care system
C)a universal health insurance system
D)socialized medicine
Question
In the United States, private health insurance companies

A)are all for-profit firms.
B)are all not-for-profit firms.
C)can be either for-profit or not-for-profit firms.
D)are all government-run firms.
Question
Health insurance plans which typically reimburse doctors mainly by paying a flat fee per patient are known as

A)fee-for-service plans.
B)preferred provider organizations.
C)single-payer health care systems.
D)health maintenance organizations.
Question
Consider a used car market in which half the cars are good and half are bad (lemons).A rational buyer in this market should

A)offer to pay a price equal to the most she would pay for a good car.
B)offer to pay a price equal to the most she would pay for a lemon.
C)offer to pay a price somewhere between the price she would pay for a good car and the price she would pay for a lemon.
D)save up and buy a new car.
Question
Canada has a single-payer health care system in which the government provides national health insurance to all Canadian residents.
Question
Suppose that in a market for used cars, there are good used cars and bad used cars (lemons).Consumers are willing to pay as much as $6,000 for a good used car but only $1,000 for a lemon.Sellers of good used cars value their cars at $5,000 each and sellers of lemons value their cars at $800 each.Buyers cannot tell if a used car is reliable or is a lemon.Based on this information, what is the likely outcome in the market for used cars?

A)Sellers of good used cars will drop out of the market.
B)Sellers of good used cars will incur losses.
C)Sellers of lemons will drop out of the market.
D)Used cars will sell for $3,000.
Question
Consider a used car market in which half the cars are good and half are bad (lemons).If buyers are rational, the prices being offered for used cars will result in

A)an equal proportion of a good cars and lemons being sold in an efficient market.
B)a larger proportion of good cars being sold and consequently, consumer surplus is increased.
C)a larger proportion of lemons being sold and consequently, producer surplus is increased.
D)an equal proportion of good cars and lemons being sold in an inefficient market.
Question
Identify and explain 4 of the difficulties in making cross-country comparisons in health care outcomes.
Question
An insurance company is likely to attract customers like Clancy, who wants to purchase insurance because he knows better than the company that he is more likely to make a claim on a policy.What is the term used to describe the situation above?

A)moral hazard
B)adverse selection
C)asymmetric information
D)economic irrationality
Question
On average, people in the United States spend a greater percentage of their income on health care than do people in most other countries.
Question
Of the following high-income countries, which has the lowest number of MRI units per 1 million population?

A)Canada
B)Japan
C)the United Kingdom
D)the United States
Question
Which of the following parties is likely to have the most information about the health of an individual who is trying to purchase a health insurance policy?

A)the company that issues the health insurance policy
B)the individual who is applying for the health insurance policy
C)the employer of the individual who is trying to purchase the health insurance policy
D)All parties in the health insurance market have access to the same level of information.
Question
Of the following high-income countries, which has the highest number of CT scanners per 1 million population?

A)Canada
B)Japan
C)the United Kingdom
D)the United States
Question
The Japanese system of universal health insurance requires no copayments from residents for health services.
Question
Consider a used car market in which half the cars are good and half are bad (lemons).Suppose the average price of a good car is $9,000 and the average price of a lemon is $3,000.If rational buyers are willing to pay $6,000 for a used car, then sellers will agree to sell mostly lemons at this price.What is the term used to describe this situation?

A)moral hazard
B)adverse selection
C)an efficient market
D)economic irrationality
Question
What is the main difference between a single-payer health care system and socialized medicine?
Question
The term that is used to refer to a situation in which one party to an economic transaction has less information than the other party is

A)inefficient market hypothesis.
B)moral hazard.
C)information disparity.
D)asymmetric information.
Question
A key difficulty facing insurance companies is that people know more about their health than do insurance companies.What is this phenomenon called?

A)moral hazard
B)economic irrationality
C)asymmetric information
D)adverse selection
Question
The U.S.Bureau of Labor Statistics forecasts that ________ fastest-growing occupations over the next 10 years will be in health care.

A)over 95 percent of the
B)less than 2 of the 10
C)13 of the 20
D)just under half of the
Question
A majority of people in the United States have private health insurance.
Question
In the United States in 2016, over 90 percent of people without health insurance were below the age of 35.
Question
What is adverse selection?

A)It refers to the private, self-interested actions people that people pursue, which when taken collectively leads to a loss in economic surplus.
B)It refers to the actions people take after they have entered into a transaction that make the other party to the transaction worse off.
C)It refers to the situation in which one party to a transaction takes advantage of knowing more than the other party to the transaction.
D)It refers to the actions people take before they enter into a transaction so as to mislead the other party to the transaction.
Question
What are the main sources of health insurance in the United States?
Question
What is moral hazard?

A)It refers to the private, self-interested actions that people pursue, which when taken collectively leads to a loss in economic surplus.
B)It refers to the actions people take after they have entered into a transaction that makes the other party to the transaction worse off.
C)It refers to the situation in which one party to a transaction takes advantage of knowing more than the other party to the transaction.
D)It refers to the actions people take before they enter into a transaction so as to mislead the other party to the transaction.
Question
Which of the following is not an advantage of risk pooling?

A)By insuring large groups as opposed to individuals, health insurance providers reduce adverse selection.
B)It gives very sick people in the group the same access to health care and to pay the same premiums as healthy individuals.
C)It is easier for an insurance company to estimate the average number of claims likely to be filed under a group policy than it is to predict the number of claims likely to be filed under an individual policy.
D)Individuals who are insured and therefore do not have to pay the full cost of health care services may be inclined to over-use those services.
Question
Adverse selection occurs in the market for used cars because used car buyers

A)have more information than used car sellers.
B)have less information than used car sellers.
C)have less incentive to maintain the value of their cars than new car buyers.
D)tend to have more accidents than new car buyers.
Question
The cost of group health insurance is lower than if an individual buys a policy on his own because

A)the problem of adverse selection is reduced.
B)moral hazard costs of a group tend to move to a low average.
C)it is easier for the company to deny claims from a large group.
D)insuring a group eliminates the problem of buyers having more information than the seller.
Question
If a doctor knows that an insurance company will pay for most of a patient's bill, the doctor has more of an incentive to require additional medical procedures and tests, even if the patient may not require them.This is an example of

A)moral hazard.
B)the principal-agent problem.
C)asymmetric information.
D)adverse selection.
Question
What is the principal-agent problem?

A)It is a problem caused by a person (principal)who hires an agent to act on his behalf but is unwilling to delegate authority to the agent to carry out the task in the best possible way.
B)It is a problem caused by agents pursuing their own interests rather than the interests of the principals who hired them.
C)It is a problem of the power system of boss and subordinate where the boss (principal)exerts influence over his subordinates (agents)using punishment or threat.
D)It is a problem that exists when a person (principal)has more information about the task than the agent he hires to perform the task.
Question
Suppose a large firm allows its employees to choose whether to participate in its health insurance plan.The firm is trying to decide between two plans: Plan I has a low monthly premium but a high deductible, and Plan II has a high monthly premium but a low deductible.Under which plan is adverse selection likely to be a bigger problem?

A)Plan I because it is likely to draw participants who expect high medical costs. This group expects to consume much health care services and therefore prefer low deductibles.
B)Plan II because it is likely to draw participants who expect high medical costs. Healthy individuals who do not expect to consume much health care services will not be willing to pay the high premiums.
C)Plan I because it is likely to draw the relatively healthy employees who do not expect to spend much on health care. Because the monthly premiums are low, the insurance company has to bear a bigger financial burden in the event of serious illnesses.
D)Plan II because it is likely to draw employees who tend to over-consume health care services because of the low deductible. Insurance companies are likely to end up paying out more claims than the premiums they collect.
Question
Automobile insurance companies have a problem with people who buy insurance and then drive recklessly or take less care to avoid losses after being insured.In other words, the automobile insurance market is subject to

A)asymmetric information.
B)market signaling.
C)moral hazard.
D)adverse selection.
Question
Figure 7-1
<strong>Figure 7-1   Figure 7-1 represents the market for vaccinations. Vaccinations are considered a benefit to society, and the figure shows both the marginal private benefit and the marginal social benefit from vaccinations. Refer to Figure 7-1.Marginal private benefit is represented by which curve?</strong> A)D₁ B)D₂ C)Supply D)All of the above represent marginal private benefit. <div style=padding-top: 35px>
Figure 7-1 represents the market for vaccinations. Vaccinations are considered a benefit to society, and the figure shows both the marginal private benefit and the marginal social benefit from vaccinations.
Refer to Figure 7-1.Marginal private benefit is represented by which curve?

A)D₁
B)D₂
C)Supply
D)All of the above represent marginal private benefit.
Question
Health insurance companies impose deductibles on policies and co-payments on claims

A)to increase sales.
B)to reduce moral hazard problems.
C)to reduces sunk costs.
D)to increase prices.
Question
In the principal-agent relationship, the agent is

A)the owner of a resource that has hired another party to act on his behalf.
B)the person who is placed in control over resources that are not his own, with a contractual obligation to use these resources in the interests of some other party.
C)the person who is placed in control over resources that are not his own and agrees to compensate the resource owner in the event of outcomes that do not satisfy the resource owner.
D)the person who places his resources in professional hands in exchange for the professional's promise to act on the resource owner's behalf.
Question
The Pre-Existing Condition Insurance Plan is a federally administered part of the Affordable Care Act, and is designed for people with pre-existing medical conditions to obtain insurance.By offering health insurance to all U.S.citizens with pre-existing medical conditions, the Pre-Existing Condition Insurance Plan eliminates ________ for both the insurer and the insured, and eliminates ________ for the issuer of the insurance policy.

A)the principal-agent problem; moral hazard
B)asymmetric information; adverse selection
C)adverse selection; the principal-agent problem
D)moral hazard; adverse selection
Question
If a fire insurance company requires firms buying fire insurance to install automatic sprinkler systems, the insurance company is trying to reduce

A)the problem of adverse selection.
B)the moral hazard problem.
C)sunk costs.
D)asymmetric information.
Question
If a state requires all drivers to purchase auto insurance, insurance companies still face the problem of

A)correctly pricing their insurance.
B)sunk costs.
C)adverse selection.
D)excess demand for their insurance.
Question
When people who buy insurance change their behavior after the purchase because they are protected from loss by the insurance, the insurance market is said to face the problem of

A)moral hazard.
B)adverse selection.
C)asymmetric information.
D)economic irrationality.
Question
If a buyer in an economic transaction has more information than the seller, the buyer benefits at the expense of the seller.This phenomenon is due to

A)moral hazard.
B)adverse selection.
C)economically irrational behavior.
D)gains from trade.
Question
Which of the following is not an advantage to an insurance company of insuring a large group of people for health insurance?

A)The characteristics of a large group are likely to reflect those of the entire population.
B)It is easier to accurately predict the number of claims for a group than for an individual.
C)When all group members pay the premium, the problem of moral hazard is reduced.
D)When all group members pay the premium, the problem of adverse selection is reduced.
Question
In markets with asymmetric information,

A)moral hazard causes adverse selection which in turn causes asymmetric information.
B)adverse selection causes moral hazard which in turn causes asymmetric information.
C)asymmetric information causes moral hazard and then it causes adverse selection.
D)asymmetric information causes adverse selection and then it causes moral hazard.
Question
One reason why adverse selection problems arise in health insurance markets is that

A)sick people are more likely to want health insurance than healthy people.
B)because of advances in medical technology, people are living longer. These medical advances are costly and drive up the price of insurance for everyone.
C)the average age of citizens of the United States has increased in recent years, and will continue to increase over the next 20 to 30 years. As older citizens retire, more and more of their medical bills will have to be paid by younger workers.
D)fewer men and women are choosing medical careers because of the increase in the cost of malpractice insurance.
Question
Figure 7-1
<strong>Figure 7-1   Figure 7-1 represents the market for vaccinations. Vaccinations are considered a benefit to society, and the figure shows both the marginal private benefit and the marginal social benefit from vaccinations. Refer to Figure 7-1.Marginal social benefit is represented by which curve?</strong> A)D₁ B)D₂ C)Supply D)All of the above represent marginal social benefit. <div style=padding-top: 35px>
Figure 7-1 represents the market for vaccinations. Vaccinations are considered a benefit to society, and the figure shows both the marginal private benefit and the marginal social benefit from vaccinations.
Refer to Figure 7-1.Marginal social benefit is represented by which curve?

A)D₁
B)D₂
C)Supply
D)All of the above represent marginal social benefit.
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Deck 7: The Economics of Health Care
1
The overall mortality rate in the United States has remained fairly constant for the past 35 years.
False
2
In the United States in 2016, the percentage of people with private health insurance was about

A)17%.
B)29%.
C)56%.
D)83%.
56%.
3
How can changes over time of the average height of the people in a country help to indicate the standard of living in a country?
A person's height partly relies on nutritional status, which depends on a person's food intake relative to the work the person has to perform, whether the person is able to remain warm in cold weather, and the diseases to which the person is exposed.Height, then, can be used as a measure of health and well-being, and therefore a measure of the standard of living.
4
In the United States in 2016, the percentage of people without any form of health insurance was about

A)9%.
B)29%.
C)64%.
D)83%.
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5
In the United States from 1981 to 2015, deaths from all of the following declined substantially except

A)cancer.
B)kidney disease.
C)heart attacks.
D)strokes.
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k this deck
6
Life expectancy at birth in the United States has more than doubled since 1850.
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7
Better health allows people to work harder, which raises a country's total income.This indicates that in effect, better health

A)is a primary cause of price increases.
B)reduces the incentive to work.
C)shifts out a country's production possibilities frontier.
D)increases consumer surplus.
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k this deck
8
In the United States from 1981 to 2015, deaths from diabetes increased largely due to the effects of

A)foreign-produced insulin.
B)stress in the workplace.
C)a larger immigrant population.
D)increasing obesity.
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k this deck
9
In the United States in 2016, the percentage of people who received health insurance through a government program was about

A)10%.
B)16%.
C)36%.
D)64%.
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Unlock for access to all 171 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
Between 1981 and 2015, the overall mortality rate in the United States

A)decreased by more than 25 percent.
B)slowly but steadily increased.
C)remained fairly constant.
D)was similar to the average rate in most low-income countries.
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k this deck
11
Changes in the health of the average person are an important indicator of changes in the standard of living.
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12
Briefly describe the most important differences between the market for health care and the market for other goods and services.
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13
On average, people in high-income countries ________ than people in low-income countries.

A)have a shorter life expectancy
B)are subject to a higher infant mortality rate
C)are taller
D)are exposed to more severe diseases
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14
Between 1981 and 2015, deaths from cancer have increased in the United States.
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15
In the United States, doctors and hospitals that provide most health care are

A)primarily private firms.
B)primarily employed by the government.
C)split evenly between private firms and employed by the government.
D)100 percent employed by the government.
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k this deck
16
A typical consumer of health care in the United States

A)pays the full price of his or her health care.
B)pays more than the full price of his or her health care.
C)does not pay any of the price of his or her health care.
D)does not pay the full price of his or her health care.
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17
How can improvements in health increase a country's total income?
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18
The overall decline in death rates in the United States since 1981 was due to all of the following except

A)a decline in smoking.
B)the decline in the population.
C)the availability of new prescription drugs.
D)new surgical techniques.
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19
Health care makes up ________ of the U.S.economy.

A)about 2 percent
B)roughly 8 percent
C)more than one-sixth
D)almost two-thirds
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20
Over the past 165 years in the United States, life expectancy

A)has remained fairly constant.
B)has slightly declined.
C)has more than doubled.
D)increased up to the 1950s and then declined for the next 60 years.
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21
The largest government-run health care system in the world, with 1.4 million employees, is in

A)Canada.
B)Japan.
C)the United Kingdom.
D)the United States.
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22
In which of the following countries are substantial co-payments typically required as a part of the health care system?

A)Canada and the United States
B)Japan and Canada.
C)the United States and Japan
D)the United States and the United Kingdom
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23
Of the following high-income countries, which has the lowest mortality ratio for cancer?

A)Canada
B)Japan
C)the United Kingdom
D)the United States
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24
Of the following high-income countries, which has the lowest life expectancy at birth?

A)Canada
B)Japan
C)the United Kingdom
D)the United States
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25
In the United States in 2016, the percentage of firms that employed more than 200 workers and offered health insurance as a fringe benefit to the workers was about

A)29%.
B)42%.
C)61%.
D)98%.
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26
In the United States in 2016, more than seventy percent of those who were not covered by health insurance

A)are single and unemployed.
B)live in families in which at least one member has a job.
C)live in families in which all members are unemployed.
D)are retired from the workforce.
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27
A contract under which a buyer agrees to make payments in exchange for the provider agreeing to pay some or all of the buyer's medical bills is referred to as

A)a fee-for-service plan.
B)the Affordable Care Act.
C)a deductible.
D)health insurance.
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k this deck
28
Typically, the higher the level of income per person in a country, the higher the level of spending per person on health care.This relationship between income and spending indicates that health care is a

A)normal good.
B)inferior good.
C)luxury.
D)necessity.
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29
The health care system in the United Kingdom is referred to as ________, under which the government owns most of the hospitals and employs most of the doctors.

A)an out-of-pocket system
B)a single-payer health care system
C)a universal health insurance system
D)socialized medicine
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30
In the United States in 2016, the percentage of people that directly purchased an individual or family health insurance policy from an insurance company was about

A)2%.
B)7%.
C)17%.
D)26%.
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31
The health care system in Canada is referred to as ________, and is a system in which the government provides national health insurance to all Canadian residents.

A)an out-of-pocket system
B)a single-payer health care system
C)a universal health insurance system
D)socialized medicine
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32
In the United States in 2016, of those companies employing more than 200 workers that offer health care to those workers, ________ of employees accept the coverage.

A)about 10 percent
B)roughly 36 percent
C)fewer than two-thirds
D)almost 98 percent
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33
Of the following high-income countries, which has the highest infant mortality rate?

A)Canada
B)Japan
C)the United Kingdom
D)the United States
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34
In the United States, health care spending per person is ________ the average for most other countries, even taking into account the effects of higher income per person.

A)slightly lower than
B)significantly higher than
C)significantly lower than
D)comparable to
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35
Most doctors and hospitals operate as private businesses in all of the following countries except

A)Canada.
B)Japan.
C)the United Kingdom.
D)the United States.
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36
Health insurance typically pays for most preventive care procedures in all of the following countries except

A)Canada.
B)Japan.
C)the United Kingdom.
D)the United States.
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37
In the United States in 2016, the percentage of firms that employed between 3 and 199 workers and offered health insurance as a fringe benefit to the workers was about

A)29%.
B)42%.
C)55%.
D)98%.
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38
The health care system in Japan is referred to as ________, under which every resident of Japan is required to enroll in either a private, or the government-provided, health insurance program.

A)an out-of-pocket system
B)a single-payer health care system
C)a universal health insurance system
D)socialized medicine
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39
In the United States, private health insurance companies

A)are all for-profit firms.
B)are all not-for-profit firms.
C)can be either for-profit or not-for-profit firms.
D)are all government-run firms.
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40
Health insurance plans which typically reimburse doctors mainly by paying a flat fee per patient are known as

A)fee-for-service plans.
B)preferred provider organizations.
C)single-payer health care systems.
D)health maintenance organizations.
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41
Consider a used car market in which half the cars are good and half are bad (lemons).A rational buyer in this market should

A)offer to pay a price equal to the most she would pay for a good car.
B)offer to pay a price equal to the most she would pay for a lemon.
C)offer to pay a price somewhere between the price she would pay for a good car and the price she would pay for a lemon.
D)save up and buy a new car.
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42
Canada has a single-payer health care system in which the government provides national health insurance to all Canadian residents.
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43
Suppose that in a market for used cars, there are good used cars and bad used cars (lemons).Consumers are willing to pay as much as $6,000 for a good used car but only $1,000 for a lemon.Sellers of good used cars value their cars at $5,000 each and sellers of lemons value their cars at $800 each.Buyers cannot tell if a used car is reliable or is a lemon.Based on this information, what is the likely outcome in the market for used cars?

A)Sellers of good used cars will drop out of the market.
B)Sellers of good used cars will incur losses.
C)Sellers of lemons will drop out of the market.
D)Used cars will sell for $3,000.
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44
Consider a used car market in which half the cars are good and half are bad (lemons).If buyers are rational, the prices being offered for used cars will result in

A)an equal proportion of a good cars and lemons being sold in an efficient market.
B)a larger proportion of good cars being sold and consequently, consumer surplus is increased.
C)a larger proportion of lemons being sold and consequently, producer surplus is increased.
D)an equal proportion of good cars and lemons being sold in an inefficient market.
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45
Identify and explain 4 of the difficulties in making cross-country comparisons in health care outcomes.
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46
An insurance company is likely to attract customers like Clancy, who wants to purchase insurance because he knows better than the company that he is more likely to make a claim on a policy.What is the term used to describe the situation above?

A)moral hazard
B)adverse selection
C)asymmetric information
D)economic irrationality
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47
On average, people in the United States spend a greater percentage of their income on health care than do people in most other countries.
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48
Of the following high-income countries, which has the lowest number of MRI units per 1 million population?

A)Canada
B)Japan
C)the United Kingdom
D)the United States
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49
Which of the following parties is likely to have the most information about the health of an individual who is trying to purchase a health insurance policy?

A)the company that issues the health insurance policy
B)the individual who is applying for the health insurance policy
C)the employer of the individual who is trying to purchase the health insurance policy
D)All parties in the health insurance market have access to the same level of information.
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50
Of the following high-income countries, which has the highest number of CT scanners per 1 million population?

A)Canada
B)Japan
C)the United Kingdom
D)the United States
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51
The Japanese system of universal health insurance requires no copayments from residents for health services.
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52
Consider a used car market in which half the cars are good and half are bad (lemons).Suppose the average price of a good car is $9,000 and the average price of a lemon is $3,000.If rational buyers are willing to pay $6,000 for a used car, then sellers will agree to sell mostly lemons at this price.What is the term used to describe this situation?

A)moral hazard
B)adverse selection
C)an efficient market
D)economic irrationality
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53
What is the main difference between a single-payer health care system and socialized medicine?
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54
The term that is used to refer to a situation in which one party to an economic transaction has less information than the other party is

A)inefficient market hypothesis.
B)moral hazard.
C)information disparity.
D)asymmetric information.
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55
A key difficulty facing insurance companies is that people know more about their health than do insurance companies.What is this phenomenon called?

A)moral hazard
B)economic irrationality
C)asymmetric information
D)adverse selection
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56
The U.S.Bureau of Labor Statistics forecasts that ________ fastest-growing occupations over the next 10 years will be in health care.

A)over 95 percent of the
B)less than 2 of the 10
C)13 of the 20
D)just under half of the
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57
A majority of people in the United States have private health insurance.
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58
In the United States in 2016, over 90 percent of people without health insurance were below the age of 35.
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59
What is adverse selection?

A)It refers to the private, self-interested actions people that people pursue, which when taken collectively leads to a loss in economic surplus.
B)It refers to the actions people take after they have entered into a transaction that make the other party to the transaction worse off.
C)It refers to the situation in which one party to a transaction takes advantage of knowing more than the other party to the transaction.
D)It refers to the actions people take before they enter into a transaction so as to mislead the other party to the transaction.
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60
What are the main sources of health insurance in the United States?
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61
What is moral hazard?

A)It refers to the private, self-interested actions that people pursue, which when taken collectively leads to a loss in economic surplus.
B)It refers to the actions people take after they have entered into a transaction that makes the other party to the transaction worse off.
C)It refers to the situation in which one party to a transaction takes advantage of knowing more than the other party to the transaction.
D)It refers to the actions people take before they enter into a transaction so as to mislead the other party to the transaction.
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62
Which of the following is not an advantage of risk pooling?

A)By insuring large groups as opposed to individuals, health insurance providers reduce adverse selection.
B)It gives very sick people in the group the same access to health care and to pay the same premiums as healthy individuals.
C)It is easier for an insurance company to estimate the average number of claims likely to be filed under a group policy than it is to predict the number of claims likely to be filed under an individual policy.
D)Individuals who are insured and therefore do not have to pay the full cost of health care services may be inclined to over-use those services.
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63
Adverse selection occurs in the market for used cars because used car buyers

A)have more information than used car sellers.
B)have less information than used car sellers.
C)have less incentive to maintain the value of their cars than new car buyers.
D)tend to have more accidents than new car buyers.
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64
The cost of group health insurance is lower than if an individual buys a policy on his own because

A)the problem of adverse selection is reduced.
B)moral hazard costs of a group tend to move to a low average.
C)it is easier for the company to deny claims from a large group.
D)insuring a group eliminates the problem of buyers having more information than the seller.
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65
If a doctor knows that an insurance company will pay for most of a patient's bill, the doctor has more of an incentive to require additional medical procedures and tests, even if the patient may not require them.This is an example of

A)moral hazard.
B)the principal-agent problem.
C)asymmetric information.
D)adverse selection.
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66
What is the principal-agent problem?

A)It is a problem caused by a person (principal)who hires an agent to act on his behalf but is unwilling to delegate authority to the agent to carry out the task in the best possible way.
B)It is a problem caused by agents pursuing their own interests rather than the interests of the principals who hired them.
C)It is a problem of the power system of boss and subordinate where the boss (principal)exerts influence over his subordinates (agents)using punishment or threat.
D)It is a problem that exists when a person (principal)has more information about the task than the agent he hires to perform the task.
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67
Suppose a large firm allows its employees to choose whether to participate in its health insurance plan.The firm is trying to decide between two plans: Plan I has a low monthly premium but a high deductible, and Plan II has a high monthly premium but a low deductible.Under which plan is adverse selection likely to be a bigger problem?

A)Plan I because it is likely to draw participants who expect high medical costs. This group expects to consume much health care services and therefore prefer low deductibles.
B)Plan II because it is likely to draw participants who expect high medical costs. Healthy individuals who do not expect to consume much health care services will not be willing to pay the high premiums.
C)Plan I because it is likely to draw the relatively healthy employees who do not expect to spend much on health care. Because the monthly premiums are low, the insurance company has to bear a bigger financial burden in the event of serious illnesses.
D)Plan II because it is likely to draw employees who tend to over-consume health care services because of the low deductible. Insurance companies are likely to end up paying out more claims than the premiums they collect.
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68
Automobile insurance companies have a problem with people who buy insurance and then drive recklessly or take less care to avoid losses after being insured.In other words, the automobile insurance market is subject to

A)asymmetric information.
B)market signaling.
C)moral hazard.
D)adverse selection.
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69
Figure 7-1
<strong>Figure 7-1   Figure 7-1 represents the market for vaccinations. Vaccinations are considered a benefit to society, and the figure shows both the marginal private benefit and the marginal social benefit from vaccinations. Refer to Figure 7-1.Marginal private benefit is represented by which curve?</strong> A)D₁ B)D₂ C)Supply D)All of the above represent marginal private benefit.
Figure 7-1 represents the market for vaccinations. Vaccinations are considered a benefit to society, and the figure shows both the marginal private benefit and the marginal social benefit from vaccinations.
Refer to Figure 7-1.Marginal private benefit is represented by which curve?

A)D₁
B)D₂
C)Supply
D)All of the above represent marginal private benefit.
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70
Health insurance companies impose deductibles on policies and co-payments on claims

A)to increase sales.
B)to reduce moral hazard problems.
C)to reduces sunk costs.
D)to increase prices.
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71
In the principal-agent relationship, the agent is

A)the owner of a resource that has hired another party to act on his behalf.
B)the person who is placed in control over resources that are not his own, with a contractual obligation to use these resources in the interests of some other party.
C)the person who is placed in control over resources that are not his own and agrees to compensate the resource owner in the event of outcomes that do not satisfy the resource owner.
D)the person who places his resources in professional hands in exchange for the professional's promise to act on the resource owner's behalf.
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72
The Pre-Existing Condition Insurance Plan is a federally administered part of the Affordable Care Act, and is designed for people with pre-existing medical conditions to obtain insurance.By offering health insurance to all U.S.citizens with pre-existing medical conditions, the Pre-Existing Condition Insurance Plan eliminates ________ for both the insurer and the insured, and eliminates ________ for the issuer of the insurance policy.

A)the principal-agent problem; moral hazard
B)asymmetric information; adverse selection
C)adverse selection; the principal-agent problem
D)moral hazard; adverse selection
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73
If a fire insurance company requires firms buying fire insurance to install automatic sprinkler systems, the insurance company is trying to reduce

A)the problem of adverse selection.
B)the moral hazard problem.
C)sunk costs.
D)asymmetric information.
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74
If a state requires all drivers to purchase auto insurance, insurance companies still face the problem of

A)correctly pricing their insurance.
B)sunk costs.
C)adverse selection.
D)excess demand for their insurance.
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75
When people who buy insurance change their behavior after the purchase because they are protected from loss by the insurance, the insurance market is said to face the problem of

A)moral hazard.
B)adverse selection.
C)asymmetric information.
D)economic irrationality.
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76
If a buyer in an economic transaction has more information than the seller, the buyer benefits at the expense of the seller.This phenomenon is due to

A)moral hazard.
B)adverse selection.
C)economically irrational behavior.
D)gains from trade.
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77
Which of the following is not an advantage to an insurance company of insuring a large group of people for health insurance?

A)The characteristics of a large group are likely to reflect those of the entire population.
B)It is easier to accurately predict the number of claims for a group than for an individual.
C)When all group members pay the premium, the problem of moral hazard is reduced.
D)When all group members pay the premium, the problem of adverse selection is reduced.
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78
In markets with asymmetric information,

A)moral hazard causes adverse selection which in turn causes asymmetric information.
B)adverse selection causes moral hazard which in turn causes asymmetric information.
C)asymmetric information causes moral hazard and then it causes adverse selection.
D)asymmetric information causes adverse selection and then it causes moral hazard.
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79
One reason why adverse selection problems arise in health insurance markets is that

A)sick people are more likely to want health insurance than healthy people.
B)because of advances in medical technology, people are living longer. These medical advances are costly and drive up the price of insurance for everyone.
C)the average age of citizens of the United States has increased in recent years, and will continue to increase over the next 20 to 30 years. As older citizens retire, more and more of their medical bills will have to be paid by younger workers.
D)fewer men and women are choosing medical careers because of the increase in the cost of malpractice insurance.
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80
Figure 7-1
<strong>Figure 7-1   Figure 7-1 represents the market for vaccinations. Vaccinations are considered a benefit to society, and the figure shows both the marginal private benefit and the marginal social benefit from vaccinations. Refer to Figure 7-1.Marginal social benefit is represented by which curve?</strong> A)D₁ B)D₂ C)Supply D)All of the above represent marginal social benefit.
Figure 7-1 represents the market for vaccinations. Vaccinations are considered a benefit to society, and the figure shows both the marginal private benefit and the marginal social benefit from vaccinations.
Refer to Figure 7-1.Marginal social benefit is represented by which curve?

A)D₁
B)D₂
C)Supply
D)All of the above represent marginal social benefit.
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