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Journal Article
The Tax Exclusion for Employer-Sponsored Insurance Is Not Regressive—But What Is It?
Available to Purchase
J Health Polit Policy Law (2017) 42 (4): 697–708.
Published: 01 August 2017
...Joseph White Abstract Conventional wisdom says that the tax exclusion for employer-sponsored health insurance (ESI) is “regressive and therefore unfair.” Yet, by the standard definition of regressive tax policy, the conventional view is almost certainly false. It confuses the absolute size...
View articletitled, The Tax Exclusion for <span class="search-highlight">Employer</span>-<span class="search-highlight">Sponsored</span> <span class="search-highlight">Insurance</span> Is Not Regressive—But What Is It?
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for article titled, The Tax Exclusion for <span class="search-highlight">Employer</span>-<span class="search-highlight">Sponsored</span> <span class="search-highlight">Insurance</span> Is Not Regressive—But What Is It?
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Trends in offer rates for employer-sponsored insurance coverage, by workers...
Available to PurchasePublished: 01 October 2020
Figure 7 Trends in offer rates for employer-sponsored insurance coverage, by workers' firm size, 2014–2018. Notes : Analysis limited to workers aged 19–64 years. Source : Annual Social and Economic Supplement of the Current Population Survey 2014–2018.
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Journal Article
Can an Employer-Based Health Insurance System Be Just?
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J Health Polit Policy Law (1993) 18 (3): 657–673.
Published: 01 June 1993
... as a central example gender inequities in employment and exploring their impact on job-based health insurance. Second, I explore the possibility that justly awarding jobs guarantees justice in employment-sponsored insurance. However, linking the distributions of different goods remains problematic, because...
View articletitled, Can an <span class="search-highlight">Employer</span>-Based Health <span class="search-highlight">Insurance</span> System Be Just?
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for article titled, Can an <span class="search-highlight">Employer</span>-Based Health <span class="search-highlight">Insurance</span> System Be Just?
Journal Article
How Workers Fared under the ACA
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J Health Polit Policy Law (2020) 45 (5): 863–887.
Published: 01 October 2020
...Figure 7 Trends in offer rates for employer-sponsored insurance coverage, by workers' firm size, 2014–2018. Notes : Analysis limited to workers aged 19–64 years. Source : Annual Social and Economic Supplement of the Current Population Survey 2014–2018. ...
FIGURES
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Journal Article
J Health Polit Policy Law 11853756.
Published: 03 April 2025
... consolidation cross-market merger employer-sponsored insurance health care costs MANUUNSECDRIITPETD Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law Gudiksen et al. Hospital Consolidation across Geographic Markets Hospital Consolidation Across Geographic Markets: Insights from Market Participants...
Journal Article
Health Insurance Loss during COVID-19 May Increase Support for Universal Health Coverage
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J Health Polit Policy Law (2022) 47 (1): 1–25.
Published: 01 February 2022
...Ashley Fox; Yongjin Choi; Heather Lanthorn; Kevin Croke Abstract Context: The United States is the only high-income country that relies on employer-sponsored health coverage to insure a majority of its population. Millions of Americans lost employer-sponsored health insurance during the COVID-19...
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View articletitled, Health <span class="search-highlight">Insurance</span> Loss during COVID-19 May Increase Support for Universal Health Coverage
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for article titled, Health <span class="search-highlight">Insurance</span> Loss during COVID-19 May Increase Support for Universal Health Coverage
Includes: Supplementary data
Journal Article
Mandating Insurance Offers for Low-Wage Workers: An Evaluation of Labor Market Effects
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J Health Polit Policy Law (2003) 28 (5): 883–926.
Published: 01 October 2003
...Amy Wolaver; Timothy McBride; Barbara Wolfe Employing a simultaneous model of part-time status, health insurance offers, and wages, we examine the impacts on employment and health insurance coverage of nondiscrimination rules in the tax code governing employer-sponsored health insurance. Using 1988...
Image
Published: 01 October 2020
Figure 5 Association between changes in ESI and non-ESI coverage rates, 2010–2017. Notes : ESI = Employer-sponsored insurance coverage. Non-ESI coverage refers to Medicaid, Marketplace, or other nonemployer-based coverage type. Sample restricted to workers aged 19–64 years. For underlying data
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Trends in ESI and non-ESI coverage rates, by 2010 occupation coverage rate ...
Available to PurchasePublished: 01 October 2020
Figure 6 Trends in ESI and non-ESI coverage rates, by 2010 occupation coverage rate category, 2010–2017. Panel A. ESI coverage rate. Panel B. Non-esi coverage rate. Notes : ESI = Employer-sponsored insurance coverage. Non-ESI coverage refers to Medicaid, Marketplace, or other nonemployer
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Image
Trends in ESI and non-ESI coverage rates, by 2010 occupation coverage rate ...
Available to PurchasePublished: 01 October 2020
Figure 6 Trends in ESI and non-ESI coverage rates, by 2010 occupation coverage rate category, 2010–2017. Panel A. ESI coverage rate. Panel B. Non-esi coverage rate. Notes : ESI = Employer-sponsored insurance coverage. Non-ESI coverage refers to Medicaid, Marketplace, or other nonemployer
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Journal Article
Ten Years Later: Reflections on Critics' Worst-Case Scenarios for the Affordable Care Act
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J Health Polit Policy Law (2020) 45 (4): 465–483.
Published: 01 August 2020
... the 2014 Medicaid Expansion and US Hospital Finances .” JAMA 316 , no. 14 : 1475 – 83 . doi.org/10.1001/jama.2016.14765 . Blavin Fredric , Shartzer Adele , Long Sharon K. , and Holahan John . 2015 . “ An Early Look at Changes in Employer-Sponsored Insurance under...
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Journal Article
Expanding Health Insurance Coverage: Who Will Pay?
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J Health Polit Policy Law (1990) 15 (4): 755–778.
Published: 01 August 1990
...Joel C. Cantor Recent discussions on extending health insurance to the more than thirty million uninsured Americans have focused on two strategies: expanding the Medicaid program and mandating that employers sponsor coverage for their employees. This analysis, using a microsimulation model...
Journal Article
Social Insurance and American Health Care: Principles and Paradoxes
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J Health Polit Policy Law (2018) 43 (6): 1013–1024.
Published: 01 December 2018
... to benefits from the program's Parts B and D. 8. Jost agreed that the “original Social Security Act” drew a “distinction between social insurance and public welfare programs that . . . this article” traces. He noted that we may be witnessing the “end of employer-sponsored coverage as an alternative...
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Journal Article
Reinventing American Health Care: How the Affordable Care Act Will Improve Our Terribly Complex, Blatantly Unjust, Outrageously Expensive, Grossly Inefficient, Error Prone System
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J Health Polit Policy Law (2017) 42 (1): 197–204.
Published: 01 February 2017
... to health care (aside from Medicare and Medicaid). Emanuel will see this effect as one more nail in the coffin of employer-sponsored insurance. Over the long term, this dynamic might cause the health care system to approximate a single-payer system as more and more individuals buy subsidized insurance...
View articletitled, Reinventing American Health Care: How the Affordable Care Act Will Improve Our Terribly Complex, Blatantly Unjust, Outrageously Expensive, Grossly Inefficient, Error Prone System
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Journal Article
Empire and the Business of Health Insurance
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J Health Polit Policy Law (1991) 16 (4): 747–760.
Published: 01 August 1991
...Harvey M. Sapolsky I examine the development of privately provided insurance since World War II, giving special attention to Empire Blue Cross, and argue that the competition between employers and unions for the loyalty of workers after the passage of the Taft-Hartley Act helped diffuse private...
Journal Article
The ACA a Decade In: Resilience, Impact, and Vulnerabilities
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J Health Polit Policy Law (2020) 45 (4): 595–608.
Published: 01 August 2020
... ; Marmor, Oberlander, and White 2009 ; Oberlander 2011 ; White 2018 ). The intervention with likely the farthest-reaching impact—the so-called Cadillac tax that was claimed, with considerable controversy, to discourage excessively generous employer-sponsored insurance plans—was set to begin fully 8...
Journal Article
Health Insurance and Human Capital: Evidence from the Affordable Care Act's Dependent Coverage Mandate
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J Health Polit Policy Law (2018) 43 (6): 917–939.
Published: 01 December 2018
... to stay on their parents' policy until age 26. We examine the human capital decisions young adults make once they have an option for health insurance outside of employer-sponsored health insurance. Using the American Community Survey from 2001 to 2016 and a difference-in-differences research design, we...
FIGURES
View articletitled, Health <span class="search-highlight">Insurance</span> and Human Capital: Evidence from the Affordable Care Act's Dependent Coverage Mandate
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Journal Article
Have the ACA's Exchanges Succeeded? It's Complicated
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J Health Polit Policy Law (2020) 45 (4): 661–676.
Published: 01 August 2020
... they would expand private insurance coverage to low- and middle-income individuals who were increasingly unable to obtain employer-sponsored health insurance. Instead, exchanges became one of the primary fronts in the war over Obamacare. Have the exchanges been successful? The answer is not straightforward...
Journal Article
Delegated Governance in the Affordable Care Act
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J Health Polit Policy Law (2011) 36 (3): 387–391.
Published: 01 June 2011
... with
only a limited increase in federal governing authority. Building upon the
existing system of employer-sponsored insurance, the law subsidizes cov-
erage for the uninsured through either private insurers or state Medicaid
programs, many of which already contract with private managed care...
Journal Article
J Health Polit Policy Law (2020) 45 (4): 461–464.
Published: 01 August 2020
... States did establish—comprising Medicare, Medicaid, employer-sponsored insurance, and more—created yet another barrier to reform. Americans were divided into different programs that developed their own constituencies and stakeholders, thereby generating a politics of inertia among the already insured...
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