
This paper provides empirical evidence on the role of public health insurance in mitigating adverse outcomes associated with health shocks. Exploiting the rollout of a universal health insurance program in rural China, I find that total household income and consumption are fully insured against health shocks even without access to health insurance. Household labor supply is an important insurance mechanism against health shocks. Access to health insurance helps households to maintain investment in children's human capital during negative health shocks, which suggests that one benefit of health insurance could arise from reducing the use of costly smoothing mechanisms.
Adult, Male, Rural Population, China, Empirical Research, Health shocks, O1, Insurance Coverage, Health insurance, I1, Humans, Poverty, Family Characteristics, ddc:330, China, health insurance, health shock, Middle Aged, D1, Health Care Reform, health insurance, Female, Health Expenditures, health shock, jel: jel:I1, jel: jel:O1, jel: jel:D1
Adult, Male, Rural Population, China, Empirical Research, Health shocks, O1, Insurance Coverage, Health insurance, I1, Humans, Poverty, Family Characteristics, ddc:330, China, health insurance, health shock, Middle Aged, D1, Health Care Reform, health insurance, Female, Health Expenditures, health shock, jel: jel:I1, jel: jel:O1, jel: jel:D1
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