Meeting: Tues Thurs 10.30 - 11.50 am
Wellman 106
Office Hours: Monday
1.30-3.00 p.m. (This is a change effective
October 5)
Wednesday 2.00-3.30 p.m.
Teaching Assistants:
Ethan Krohn ejkrohn@ucdavis.edu Office
hours: Tuesday 2-4 pm in room SSH 0116
Discussion Sections:
Chuan He A01:
Wednesday 5.10 - 6.00 pm 93 Hutchison
Chuan He A02: Wednesday 6.10 - 7.00 pm 93
Hutchison
Ethan
Krohn A03: Wednesday 9.00 - 9.50 am 93 Hutchison
Ethan Krohn
A04: Wednesday 10.00 -
10.50 am 93 Hutchison
Course Goals:
The course goals are:
(1) Provide a detailed description of the
institutional features of the health care market and current
trends in this rapidly changing field;
(2) Demonstrate the use and usefulness of analyzing
the health care market using economic analysis, particularly
microeconomics, and some statistical/mathematical analysis.
Compared to other areas of economics, health
economics is complicated by a lack of information (about what
health services the consumer needs), great uncertainty (hence
insurance) and payment through third-parties (insurance
companies) rather than direct payment by the consumer.
(3) Analyze health data using regression
methods and the statistical program Stata.
Pre-requisites:
Economics 100 (intermediate microeconomics) or ARE
100A or consent of instructor.
Mathematics 16A-B: These are a
pre-requisite for Economics 100.
An upper division regression class: one of Economics
102, Economics 140, ARE 106, Statistics 108 or consent of
instructor.
STATA for regression:
Part of the course entails analyzing
health-related data using regression methods with the
statistical package STATA.
The discussion sections are in university computer labs and
the first discussion section will be on getting started in
STATA.
Stata is installed in 93 Hutchison, 2060 Scilab
and the Virtual Lab (after 2060 SciLab closes - see http://virtuallab.ucdavis.edu)
To see whether 93 Hutchison and 2060 SciLab are available see
http://computerrooms.ucdavis.edu/available/.
If you choose to purchase Stata go to http://www.stata.com/order/new/edu/gradplans/student-pricing/
For this course and other economics classes Stata/IC is more
than adequate and costs $45 (6 months), $89 (1 year); $198
(permanent copy).
To install Stata after it is purchased: (1) Choose the correct
operating system (e.g. Windows or Mac); (2) Choose the correct
version of Stata - the student price version is Stata/IC; (3)
When you first run Stata after installation it will ask for an
"authorization code". These codes are given in a pdf
attachment you will received in the email from Stata following
purchase (some are lengthy and it is easiest to cut and paste
them in).
To get started in Stata see http://cameron.econ.ucdavis.edu/stata/stata.html
Lecture slides:
Lecture Slides are posted at the course
Canvas site (http://canvas.ucdavis.edu)
under Files / Lecture Slides.
Supplementary Material:
The UCSD Intermediate Microeconomics
videos on topics such as externalities are at the course Canvas
site under Assignments / UCSD
Intermediate Micro Handbook.
Textbook: Recommended
but not required
Jay Bhattacharya, Timothy Hyde and Peter Tu: Health
Economics, First edition, Palgrave MacMillan, 2014.
Copies of the textbook are on two-hour reserve in Shields
Library.
This is the third
time I have used this book.
Some past exams and solutions are at http://cameron.econ.ucdavis.edu/e132/e132.html
COURSE OUTLINE:
A. Introduction, Overview of U.S. Health
Market, getting started in Stata
Class 1.
Bhattacharya Chapter 1 + Supplemental
Notes.
B. Health Insurance in the U.S.: Facts,
definitions and Rand experiment
Classes 2-3. Bhattacharya Ch.18
+ Supplemental Notes.
C. Economics of Health Insurance:
Risk pooling, risk aversion, moral hazard
Classes 4-6. Bhattacharya Chs.7, 8, 9.11-9.12 + Supplemental Notes.
***** Class 7 Midterm Exam 1 *****
C. Economics of Health Insurance: moral
hazard, adverse selection, other countries
Class 8-9. Bhattacharya Chs.11 + Supplemental Notes.
D. Economic Evaluation of Health
Services: cost-benefit and cost-effectiveness analysis
Classes 10-11. Bhattacharya Ch.14 + Supplemental
Notes.
E. Demand for Health Care: Grossman model
Classes 12. Bhattacharya Chs.2-3 + Supplemental Notes
F. Suppliers: Physicians, Hospitals
Classes 13-14. Bhattacharya Chs. 5, 6 + Supplemental Notes.
J. Obesity
Midterm Exam1:
22.5% Thursday October 19
Midterm Exam2:
22.5% Thursday November 16
Assignments:
10% Due 10.30
a.m. (1) Thurs Oct 5, (2) Tues Oct 17,
(3) Thurs Nov 2, (4) Tues Nov 14, (5) Thurs Nov 30, (6) Thurs
Dec 7.
Final Exam:
45% Friday December 15
1.00 p.m. - 3.00 p.m.
Comprehensive.
Assignments are posted on Canvas under Files
/ Homeworks.
Homeworks will be graded satisfactory (2%) or unsatisfactory
(0%). Full solutions will be distributed. Satisfactory means a
serious attempt to answer at least 80% of the questions. The
lowest of the scores on the six assignments is dropped, i.e. no
penalty for not handing in one assignment if the other five are
graded satisfactory. No credit for late assignments. Academic
honesty is required - see below.
Exams are closed book with a mixture of
short answer (about two-thirds) and multiple choice (about
one-third) questions.
The final exam is comprehensive: about 60% on material up to the
second midterm and 40% on the remainder.
FOR EXAMS YOU NEED TO BRING STUDENT PHOTO ID. I
WILL DECIDE WHERE TO SEAT YOU. YOU
CANNOT USE YOUR OWN CALCULATOR OR SMARTPHONE - CALCULATORS WILL
BE PROVIDED.
Scores are posted at Canvas. You have one
week from when work is first returned in class to raise any
questions about grading.
AFTER THE FINAL EXAM IS TAKEN NO CHANGES WILL BE MADE FOR ANY
REASON TO ANY SCORES RECORDED ON CANVAS.
Course grade is determined by the total
score, with weights given above. The assignments are graded on a
generous scale (satisfactory or unsatisfactory), so most
students will get full credit on the assignment portion.
Therefore for most students the course score is determined by
scores on the assignments and exams. To indicate your progress I
give a grade on each midterm. But the final grade is determined
by summing the exam and assignment scores (and not by averaging
the grades).
I follow the Department of Economics grading policy
of a class average GPA of 2.7.
e.g. 20% A's. 50% B's, 15% C's, 10% D's and 5% F's. http://economics.ucdavis.edu/undergrad-program/advising/courses/grading-policy