Urban-rural medical insurance integration and universal health insurance coverage in China: A quasi-experimental study
利用中国337个地级市数据和双重差分法,发现城乡医保整合使全民医保覆盖率提高约5.6%,主要通过提高报销率和降低自付费用实现,对弱势群体效果更明显。
Fragmented health insurance systems create barriers to universal health coverage (UHC) and reinforce social inequalities in urban development. To address these challenges, China implemented an urban–rural medical insurance integration policy, aiming to unify fragmented schemes and equalize access to healthcare. Using data from the China Labor-force Dynamic Survey and policy implementation records across 337 prefecture-level cities, this study applies a staggered difference-in-differences (DID) design to estimate the causal effects of integration. The results show that the reform significantly increased universal health insurance coverage (UHI) in Chinese cities, raising coverage by about 5.6%. Mechanism analysis indicates that higher reimbursement rates and lower out-of-pocket expenditures enhanced individuals’ incentives to enroll. Heterogeneity analysis further reveals stronger effects among disadvantaged groups, such as those with lower education levels and older adults, while no crowding-out effect on commercial insurance is observed. The findings suggest that integrating fragmented health insurance systems can advance universal coverage and promote the equalization of public services, thereby contributing to more inclusive and sustainable cities. Urban–rural medical insurance integration significantly increased coverage by 5.6%. The effects were driven by higher reimbursement rates and lower out-of-pocket costs. Stronger impacts were observed among socioeconomically disadvantaged groups. No evidence of crowding-out effects on commercial insurance participation was found. A city-level DID design supports robust causal inference.