Regina T. Riphahn
;
Achim Wambach
;
Andreas Million
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incentive effects in the demand for health care: a bivariate panel count data estimation (replication data)

This paper contributes in three dimensions to the literature on health care demand. First, it features the first application of a bivariate random effects estimator in a count data setting, to permit the efficient estimation of this type of model with panel data. Second, it provides an innovative test of adverse selection and confirms that high-risk individuals are more likely to acquire supplemental add-on insurance. Third, the estimations yield that in accordance with the theory of moral hazard, we observe a much lower frequency of doctor visits among the self-employed, and among mothers of small children.

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Suggested Citation

Riphahn, Regina T.; Wambach, Achim; Million, Andreas (2003): Incentive effects in the demand for health care: a bivariate panel count data estimation (replication data). Version: 1. Journal of Applied Econometrics. Dataset. https://journaldata.zbw.eu/dataset/incentive-effects-in-the-demand-for-health-care-a-bivariate-panel-count-data-estimation?activity_id=8ac1e789-432d-4c33-9fd4-331e35817ade