1,953 research outputs found

    The automatic fiscal stabilizers: quietly doing their thing

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    Fiscal policy ; Consumption (Economics) ; Business cycles ; Economic stabilization

    Trading-Off Reproductive Technology and Adoption: Does Subsidizing in Vitro Fertilization Decrease Adoption Rates and Should It Matter?

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    For those facing infertility, using assisted reproductive technology to have genetically related children is a very expensive proposition. In particular, to produce a live birth through in vitro fertilization (IVF) will cost an individual (on average) between 66,667and66,667 and 114,286 in the U.S. If forced to pay these prices out of pocket, many would be unable to afford this technology. Given this reality, a number of states have attempted to improve access to reproductive technology through state-level insurance mandates that cover IVF. Several scholars, however, have worried that increasing access in this way will cause a diminution in adoptions and have argued against enactment of state mandates for that reason. In this paper, which was selected for presentation at the 2010 Stanford-Yale Junior Faculty Forum, we push against that conclusion on two fronts. First, we interrogate the normative premises of the argument and expose its contestable implicit assumptions about how the state should balance the interests of existing children waiting for adoption and those seeking access to reproductive technology in order to have genetically related children. Second, we investigate the unexamined empirical question behind the conclusion: does state subsidization of reproductive technologies through insurance mandates actually reduce adoption; that is, is there a trade-off between helping individuals conceive and helping children waiting to be adopted? We call the claim that there is such an effect the “substitution theory.” Using the differential timing of introduction of state-level insurance mandates relating to IVF in some states and differences in the forms these mandates take, we employ several different econometric techniques (differences-in-differences, ordinary least squares, two-stage least squares) to examine the effect of these mandates on IVF utilization and adoption. Contrary to the assumption of the substitution theory, we find no strong evidence that state support of IVF through these mandates crowds out either domestic or international adoption. Appendix A re-analyses our results using the insurance mandate categorization of other studies in the literature

    Nudging the FDA

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    [Excerpt] The FDA’s regulation of drugs is frequently the subject of policy debate, with arguments falling into two camps. On the one hand, a libertarian view of patients and the health care system holds high the value of consumer choice. Patients should get all the information and the drugs they want; the FDA should do what it can to enforce some basic standards but should otherwise get out of the way. On the other hand, a paternalist view values the FDA’s role as an expert agency standing between patients and a set of potentially dangerous drugs and potentially unscrupulous or at least insufficiently careful drug companies. We lay out here some of the ways the FDA regulates drugs, including some normally left out of the debate, and suggest a middle ground between libertarian and paternalistic approaches focused on correcting information asymmetry and aligning incentives.

    Las fronteras del Derecho sanitario: globalización y turismo médico

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    Traducción de Pablo de LoraUno de los efectos más palpables de la globalización de la asistencia sanitaria lo constituye el fenómeno conocido como «turismo médico». En este trabajo expondré algunos datos que muestran su alcance analizando sus distintas variantes y los problemas éticos y jurídicos que suscita. En una segunda parte me centraré en el que denomino «turismo de circunvalación », y, en concreto, en tres de sus expresiones más controvertidas: el turismo reproductivo, el turismo abortivo y el turismo para el suicidio asistido. Mi objetivo es, en este segundo ámbito, mostrar que un Estado puede tener razones para tipificar el turismo de circunvalaciónOne of the salient effects of the globalization of health care is «medical tourism». In this essay I will present some data that depicts the scope of this phenomenon, analyzing its variants and the ethical and legal challenges that medical tourism pose. In the second part of the article I will focus on what I have labeled as «circumvention tourism», and more specifically I will deal with three of its most controversial expressions: reproductive tourism, abortion tourism and assisted suicide tourism. For that matter my goal is to show that the originating State may have good reasons to criminalize circumvention tourism in some circumstance
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