We thank Sebastian Fleitas, Bentley MacLeod, Maria Polyakova and Ashley Swanson for serving as discussants for this paper. We also thank Kate Bundorf, Marika Cabral, Amitabh Chandra, Vilsa Curto, Leemore Dafny, Keith Ericson, Amy Finkelstein, Jon Gruber, Tom McGuire, Neale Mahoney, Joe Newhouse, Evan Saltzman, Brad Shapiro, Pietro Tebaldi, and participants at NBER Health Care, NBER Insurance Working Group, CEPRA/NBER Workshop on Aging and Health, the 2019 Becker Friedman Institute Health Economics Initiative Annual Conference at the University of Chicago, the 2019 American Economic Association meetings, the 2018 American Society of Health Economists meeting, the 2018 Annual Health Economics Conference, the 2018 Chicago Booth Junior Health Economics Summit, and seminars at the Brookings Institution and the University of Wisconsin for useful feedback. We gratefully acknowledge financial support for this project from the Laura and John Arnold Foundation, the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development center grant P2CHD042849 awarded to the Population Research Center at UT-Austin, the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (K01-HS25786-01), and the National Institute on Aging, Grant Number T32-AG000186. No party had the right to review this paper prior to its circulation. The views expressed herein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Bureau of Economic Research.
Michael Geruso
Disclosures, Michael Geruso
No funder or other agency had the opportunity to review this research prior to publication. Potentially relevant professional and financial relationships in the past 3 years:
*University of Texas at Austin: Assistant Professor: Salary
*Litigation consulting on the Medicare Advantage market
*Litigation consulting on freestanding EDs
*Pfizer center grant, administered through the Population Research Center, UT-Austin: “Selection Incentives in US Health Plan Design.” PI.
*Pfizer in-kind support: Facilitated data access with a third party, MMIT.
*TerraMedica International: Conference travel reimbursement
*National Bureau of Economic Research: Conference travel reimbursement
*Monetary research prizes and speaker honoraria: Kellogg School of Management, Urban Institute/American Action Forum and Tulane University
*NIH R03 Grant: "Impacts of Sanitation on Child and Maternal Health" 2014-2016 1R03HD081209-01. PI.
Timothy J. Layton
Harvard Medical School: Assistant Professor (salary), Litigation consulting with Greylock MacKinnon and Associates (consulting fees $30-40k), Consulting fees from University of Texas – Austin for project “Selection Incentives in US Health Plan Design.” [funded by Pfizer] ($10k), Grant from John and Laura Arnold Foundation, Grant from National Institute of Mental Health, Grant from Anthem, Inc., Grant from National Institute on Aging, Grant from Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Grant from Social Security Administration, Payment from Farallon Capital Management for consulting (under $1000)
Grace McCormack
1. Sources of financial support for the research
• Harvard Kennedy School (PhD student stipend)
• National Bureau of Economic Research Health and Aging fellowship (funded by National Institute on Aging, Grant number T32-AG000186)
• Harvard Kennedy School’s Taubman Center for State and Local Government
2. Potentially relevant professional and financial relationships in the past 3 years:
None
3. Paid or unpaid positions of relevant entities.
None
4. Spousal or family-related COIs
None
5. Each author must disclose if another party had the right to review the paper prior to its circulation.
None
6. IRB approval
Approval was obtained from the IRBs at Harvard University and NBER.