Insurance Design and Consumer Choice
Today’s papers both study health insurance markets from the consumer’s perspective, asking how plan design and rationing mechanisms affect welfare. Wagner studies the optimal design of choice menus when insurance plans differ along multiple dimensions simultaneously. Russo studies wait-time rationing in the VA, comparing it to price-based alternatives. Both papers combine structural modeling with policy-relevant counterfactuals, illustrating how modern empirical tools can inform the design of public insurance programs.
Anna Russo — “Waiting or Paying for Healthcare”
- PhD: MIT, 2024
- Placement: Junior Fellow, Harvard Society of Fellows; Assistant Professor of Economics, Harvard University (starting 2026)
- Paper: Waiting or Paying for Healthcare: Evidence from the Veterans Health Administration, Working Paper (conditionally accepted, American Economic Review)
Russo studies wait-time rationing in the VA healthcare system using variation induced by the Choice Act, which subsidized veterans’ access to non-VA providers. She finds that rationing via wait times redistributes access toward lower-SES veterans but at a large efficiency cost (approximately 23%). A targeted increase in copayments would generate greater consumer surplus than the Choice Act at lower public cost. The paper provides one of the first empirical comparisons of price-based versus time-based rationing in a major public healthcare system. Winner of the 2025 ASHEcon Student Paper Award.