Structure of the course
ALL LECTURES START AT 9:30 am Central European Time! SEMINARS will follow right after the lecture, with a short break.No lectures and seminars on March 29, 2024 (Easter Friday)
Final exam will take a written form on May 24, 2024 at 9.30 at the IES
A class will be set up on Moodle for class and assignment administration. Password will be shared in class (Health Economics 2023/2024).
Lecture dates + seminar dates - syllabus: 1. Feb. 23 – Introduction. Health economics in the context of public economics. Data. Health as special goods. Actors in health. Why is healthcare market different?
Reading:
Olsen (2017), Principles in health economics and health policy. Ch 3 What makes the market for healthcare different, pp. 47-60
Bhattacharya (2014), Health Economics. Ch1 Why health economics? pp. 1-5
Seminar:
No seminar reading this week. 2. March 1 – Grossman model – demand for health
Reading:
Bhattacharya (2014), Health Economics. Ch 2. Demand for health, pp. 8-27
Bhattacharya (2014), Health Economics. Ch 3 Demand for health: The Grossman model, pp 28-50
Seminar reading:
· Santos, J. V., & Cylus, J. (2024). The value of healthy ageing: Estimating the economic value of health using time use data. Social Science & Medicine, 340, 116451
· Votapkova, J., & Zilova, P. (2016). The abolition of user charges and the demand for ambulatory visits: evidence from the Czech Republic. Health economics review, 6(1), 1-11
· Hartwig, J., & Sturm, J. E. (2018). Testing the Grossman model of medical spending determinants with macroeconomic panel data. The European Journal of Health Economics, 19, 1067-1086 3. March 8 – Inequality in health. Health insurance. Moral hazard. Adverse selection. Uncertainty
Reading
Bhattacharya (2014), Health Economics. Ch 4 Socioeconomic disparities in health, pp 51-75
Bhattacharya (2014), Health Economics. Ch 7 Demand for insurance, pp. 126 – 140
Olsen (2017), Principles in health economics and health policy. Ch 7 Uncertainty and health insurance, pp. 107-117
Seminar reading:
· Pascual, M., Cantarero, D., & Lanza, P. (2018). Health polarization and inequalities across Europe: an empirical approach. The European Journal of Health Economics, 19, 1039-1051
· Adams-Prassl, A., Boneva, T., Golin, M., Rauh C. (2022) The impact of the coronavirus lockdown on mental health: evidence from the United States, Economic Policy 37 (109), pp 139-155 4. March 15 – Adverse selection and moral hazard
Reading:
Bhattacharya (2014), Health Economics. Ch 8 Adverse selection: Akerlof´s market for lemons, pp 141 – 161
Bhattacharya (2014), Health Economics. Ch 11 Moral hazard, pp 203 – 227
Seminar reading:
· Van Winssen, K. P. M., Van Kleef, R. C., & Van de Ven, W. P. M. M. (2018). Can premium differentiation counteract adverse selection in the Dutch supplementary health insurance? A simulation study. The European journal of health economics, 19, 757-768