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How do Rules and Costs Affect a Firm's Setting of Benefits? The Case of Health Insurance and Workforce Skills

Advances in the Economic Analysis of Participatory and Labor-Managed Firms

ISBN: 978-0-85724-759-9, eISBN: 978-0-85724-760-5

Publication date: 6 December 2011

Abstract

Institutional rules and economies of scale can create incentives for firms to make inframarginal decisions when offering fringe benefits. We examine how such incentives might affect a firm's offer of health insurance.

We develop and estimate an empirical model of the firm's offer of health insurance that includes incentives created by rules and economies of scale. We quantify the behavioral manifestations from rules and costs as recruiting difficulty in areas outside those in which compensation is set and the percentage of high-skilled jobs in the firm and use the California Health and Employment Surveys (CHES) to estimate the model.

We show a 10–13 percentage point increase in the probability of a firm offering workers health insurance in jobs outside of those in which compensation is being set, if the recruiting difficulty lies in mid- or high-skilled positions. This increase is about twice the size of the increase associated with recruiting difficulty in the position in which compensation is negotiated.

A failure to control for the influence of inframarginal decision making when estimating the wage-insurance tradeoff helps produce wrong-signed estimates.

By bringing institutional rules and economies of scale into the framework of a firm's offer of fringe benefits, we help move the focus of the fringe benefit-wage tradeoff away from the individual level.

Keywords

Citation

Maxwell, N.L. (2011), "How do Rules and Costs Affect a Firm's Setting of Benefits? The Case of Health Insurance and Workforce Skills", DeVaro, J. (Ed.) Advances in the Economic Analysis of Participatory and Labor-Managed Firms (Advances in the Economic Analysis of Participatory & Labor-Managed Firms, Vol. 12), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 89-114. https://doi.org/10.1108/S0885-3339(2011)0000012008

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2011, Emerald Group Publishing Limited