We use data from the Health and Retirement Study (HRS) to document the distribution of out‐of‐pocket medical spending among individuals aged 55 and over in the US. The HRS data permit us to examine out‐of‐pocket spending close to the end of life and to analyse the components of spending in more detail than has been done in previous studies. We find that spending risk rises sharply at older ages and near the end of life. While the median individual spent $6,328 out‐of‐pocket in the last year of life, 5 per cent were reported to have spent over $62,040. Our results also indicate that out‐of‐pocket spending is highly concentrated, with the top 10 per cent of spenders accounting for 42 per cent of all spending, and persistent, even over periods spanning many years. Finally, while certain categories of spending are very responsive to income and wealth, we do not find overall spending to be highly concentrated along these dimensions. Viewed within the international context, our results suggest that the fraction of households facing very high out‐of‐pocket spending is substantially greater in the US than in other developed countries.
In this paper we construct a new measure of U.S. prices relative to those of its trading partners and use it to reexamine the behavior of U.S. net exports. Our measure differs from existing measures of the dollar's real effective exchange rate (REER) in that it explicitly incorporates both the difference in price levels between the United States and developing economies and the growing importance of these developing economies in world trade. Unlike existing REERs, our measure shows that relative U.S. prices have increased significantly over the past 15 years. In terms of simple correlations, the relationship between our measure of relative prices and U.S. net exports is much more coherent than that between existing REERs and net exports. To explore this relationship further, we use our measure to construct an index of foreign prices relevant for U.S. export volumes and reexamine several export equations. We find that export equations with the new index dominate those with previous measures in terms of in-sample fit, outof-sample fit, and parameter constancy. In addition, we find that with the new index of foreign prices the estimated elasticity of U.S. exports with respect to foreign income is a good bit higher than the unitary elasticity found in previous studies using other price measures. This has implications for U.S. current account adjustment.
In this paper we construct a new measure of U.S. prices relative to those of its trading partners and use it to reexamine the behavior of U.S. net exports. Our measure differs from existing measures of the dollar's real effective exchange rate (REER) in that it explicitly incorporates both the difference in price levels between the United States and developing economies and the growing importance of these developing economies in world trade. Unlike existing REERs, our measure shows that relative U.S. prices have increased significantly over the past 15 years. In terms of simple correlations, the relationship between our measure of relative prices and U.S. net exports is much more coherent than that between existing REERs and net exports. To explore this relationship further, we use our measure to construct an index of foreign prices relevant for U.S. export volumes and reexamine several export equations. We find that export equations with the new index dominate those with previous measures in terms of in-sample fit, outof-sample fit, and parameter constancy. In addition, we find that with the new index of foreign prices the estimated elasticity of U.S. exports with respect to foreign income is a good bit higher than the unitary elasticity found in previous studies using other price measures. This has implications for U.S. current account adjustment.
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