Do Ordeals Work for Selection Markets? Evidence from Health Insurance Auto-Enrollment

Publication information:

Shepard, Mark, and Myles Wagner. n.d. “Do Ordeals Work for Selection Markets? Evidence from Health Insurance Auto-Enrollment.”

Abstract

Are application hassles, or “ordeals,” an effective way to limit public program enrollment? We provide new evidence by studying (removal of) an auto-enrollment policy for health insurance, adding an extra step to enroll. This minor ordeal has a major impact, reducing enrollment by 33% and differentially excluding young, healthy, and economically disadvantaged people. Using a simple model, we show that adverse selection – a classic feature of insurance markets – undermines ordeals' standard rationale of excluding low-value individuals, since they are also low-cost and may not be inefficient. Our analysis illustrates why ordeals targeting is unlikely to work well in selection markets.

Notes

Conditionally Accepted, American Economic Review
Coverage: HKS Insights