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Jack Willis

Columbia University
Copays, Selection, and Impact: Experimental Evidence on Health Insurance in Uganda
Joint with Lorenzo Casaburi (U Zurich), Kim Cramer (LSE)
Venue
MEGA - Salle Carine Nourry

Maison de l'économie et de la gestion d'Aix
424 chemin du viaduc
13080 Aix-en-Provence

Date(s)
Friday, January 23 2026
11:00am to 12:15pm
Contact(s)

Timothée Demont: timothee.demont[at]univ-amu.fr
Habiba Djebbari: habiba.djebbari[at]univ-amu.fr

More information
Abstract

How do copayments affect the benefits of health insurance in low-income settings? We study this question in a field experiment in rural Uganda that varies copayments for hospital-based outpatient insurance. Insurance substantially increases use of high-quality hospital care, improves health, and reduces reliance on costly coping strategies. Lower copayments generate larger increases in utilization, yet health and financial-protection gains are similar across copayment levels. When net benefits, which account for selection and insurer costs, are computed from experimentally estimated outcomes, higher copayments perform better. In contrast, revealed-preference calculations based on households’ valuation favor low copayments, highlighting a tension between outcome-based and valuation-based approaches to insurance design.