比较摩擦:来自医疗保险药品计划的实验证据

Comparison Friction: Experimental Evidence from Medicare Drug Plans

Quarterly Journal of Economics · 2012
被引 335
人大 A+FT50ABS 4*

中文导读

通过随机实验发现,即使比较信息免费且易获取,主动提供信息仍能显著提高消费者更换药品计划的比例并降低费用,表明比较摩擦在信息成本很小时依然很大。

Abstract

Consumers need information to compare alternatives for markets to function efficiently. Recognizing this, public policies often pair competition with easy access to comparative information. The implicit assumption is that comparison friction—the wedge between the availability of comparative information and consumers' use of it—is inconsequential because when information is readily available, consumers will access this information and make effective choices. We examine the extent of comparison friction in the market for Medicare Part D prescription drug plans in the United States. In a randomized field experiment, an intervention group received a letter with personalized cost information. That information was readily available for free and widely advertised. However, this additional step—providing the information rather than having consumers actively access it—had an impact. Plan switching was 28% in the intervention group, versus 17% in the comparison group, and the intervention caused an average decline in predicted consumer cost of about $100 a year among letter recipients—roughly 5% of the cost in the comparison group. Our results suggest that comparison friction can be large even when the cost of acquiring information is small and may be relevant for a wide range of public policies that incorporate consumer choice.

比较摩擦消费者选择医疗保险D部分随机实地实验