The Rational Nonpurchase of Long-Term-Care Insurance
探讨为何理性、信息充分的个人仍可能不购买长期护理保险,即使保费精算公平,因为保险主要增加了遗产价值而非个人效用。
Only a tiny fraction of the nonpoor population currently purchases private insurance coverage against long-term-care costs. Studies generally attribute the failure to purchase private coverage to "unawareness" by potential purchasers of the benefits of coverage and a misperception that Medicare currently covers long-term care. The author explores alternative reasons for failure to purchase coverage by well-informed, expected utility-maximizing, risk-averse individuals for whom long-term care is associated with a large increase in mortality and for whom family members represent an alternative source of care. There may be no demand for long-term-care insurance, even if it is made available at actuarially fair premiums, because the main consequence of coverage is to enhance the expected value of one's estate. Copyright 1990 by University of Chicago Press.