PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Rising health care prices are driving unemployment and job losses

2024-06-24
(Press-News.org)

New Haven, Conn. — Rising health care prices in the U.S. are leading employers outside the health care sector to reduce their payroll and decrease their number of employees, according to a new study co-authored by Yale economist Zack Cooper. 

The study, published June 24 as a working paper by the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER), found that when health care prices increased, non-health care employers responded by reducing their payroll and cutting the jobs of middle-class workers. For the average county, a 1% increase in health care prices would reduce aggregate income in the area by approximately $8 million annually. 

The study was conducted by a team of leading economists from Yale, the University of Chicago, the University of Wisconsin-Madison, Harvard University, the U.S. Internal Revenue Service (IRS), and the U.S. Department of the Treasury. 

“When health care prices go up, jobs outside the health care sector go down,” said Cooper, an associate professor of health policy at the Yale School of Public Health and of economics in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences. “It’s broadly understood that employer-sponsored health insurance creates a link between health care markets and labor markets. Our research shows that middle- and lower-income workers are shouldering rising health care prices, and in many cases, it's costing them their jobs. Bottom line: Rising health care costs are increasing economic inequality.”

To better understand how rising health care prices affect labor market outcomes, the researchers brought together insurance claims data on approximately a third of adults with employer-sponsored insurance, health insurance premium data from the U.S. Department of Labor, and IRS data from every income tax return filed in the United States between 2008 and 2017. They then used these data to trace out how an increase in health care prices — such as a $2,000 increase on a $20,000 hospital bill — flows through to health spending, insurance premiums, employer payrolls, income and unemployment in counties, and the tax revenue collected by the federal government. 

“Many think that it’s insurers or employers who bear the burden of rising health care prices. We show that it’s really the workers themselves who are impacted,” said Zarek Brot-Goldberg, an assistant professor at the Harris School of Public Policy at the University of Chicago. “It’s vital to understand that rising health care prices aren’t just impacting patients. Rising prices are hurting the employment outcomes for workers who never went to the hospital.” 

For the new study, the authors used hospital mergers as a vehicle to assess the effect of price increases. From 2000 to 2020, there were over 1,000 hospital mergers among the approximately 5,000 U.S. hospitals. In past work, the authors found that approximately 20% of hospital mergers should have been expected to raise prices by lessening competition, according to merger guidelines from the Department of Justice and the Federal Trade Commission. These mergers, on average, raised prices by 5%. 

“We can use our analysis to estimate the effect of hospital mergers,” said Stuart Craig, an assistant professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison Business School. “Our results show that a hospital merger that raised prices by 5% would result in $32 million in lost wages, 203 lost jobs, a $6.8 million reduction in federal tax revenue, and a death from suicide or overdose of a worker outside the health sector.”

The study also showed that because rising health care prices leads firms to let go of workers, a knock-on effect of hospital mergers is that they lead to increases in government spending on unemployment insurance and reductions in the tax revenue collected by the federal government. 

“It’s vital to point out that hospital mergers raise spending by the federal government and lower tax revenue at the same time,” said Cooper. “When prices in the U.S health sector rise, it’s actually a net negative for the economy. It’s leading to fewer jobs and precipitating all the consequences we associate with workers becoming unemployed.” 

Other authors of the study were Lev Klarnet from Harvard University, Ithai Lurie from U.S. Department of Treasury, and Corbin Miller from the U.S. Internal Revenue Service.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

NUTRITION 2024 press materials available now

2024-06-24
Press materials are now available for NUTRITION 2024, the annual flagship meeting of the American Society for Nutrition (ASN). Top nutrition scientists and practitioners from around the world will gather to share the latest research findings on food and nutrition during the meeting, held in Chicago from June 29–July 2. Register for a press pass to attend NUTRITION 2024 in person or to access embargoed press materials before the meeting. Explore the meeting schedule, poster presentations, poster theater flash sessions and oral presentations to see all the exciting research ...

Study Shows Stricter Alcohol Policies Are Associated with Reduction in Homicides

2024-06-24
Ann Arbor, June 24, 2024 – Alcohol consumption is involved in a large proportion of homicides and suicides each year in the United States, but there has been limited evidence on how policies targeting alcohol use influence violence. A statistical analysis in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine, published by Elsevier, indicates that more restrictive alcohol policy environments are associated with a reduction in specific states’ homicide rates. Lead investigator James P. Murphy, PhD, RAND Corporation, Santa Monica, CA, says, "Previous studies have found a significant relationship between some state-level ...

Kennesaw State University researcher to analyze electromagnetic waves with help of grant

Kennesaw State University researcher to analyze electromagnetic waves with help of grant
2024-06-24
The stereotype of mathematics and mathematicians involves a solitary pursuit of knowledge, but Eric Stachura knows better. The Kennesaw State University assistant professor of mathematics works on quantitative analysis of electromagnetic waves and keeps a collaborative research practice with colleagues near and far. That partnership has led to a three-year grant worth $223,206 from the Army Research Office, a director of the U.S. Army Combat Capabilities Development Command Army Research Laboratory. “It is a very collaborative subject, ...

NIH and National Science Foundation to award $15.4 million for RNA research

NIH and National Science Foundation to award $15.4 million for RNA research
2024-06-24
The National Institutes of Health (NIH) has partnered with the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) to provide approximately $15.4 million over three years for research into the structures, functions and interactions of ribonucleic acid (RNA), as well as the creation of RNA-based technologies. RNA sequencing and the mapping of RNA modifications have gained significant momentum in the genomics community in recent years, with a new report from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine outlining a roadmap for the field to build technology and infrastructure to allow researchers to more completely study and catalog RNA and its modifications.  “A ...

Study examines acceptability of teleneurology across neurological conditions

2024-06-24
INDIANAPOLIS – One of the first studies to examine patient acceptability of teleneurology and determine factors influencing acceptability across neurological conditions, has found teleneurology was highly acceptable across the full range of patients with different neurological diagnoses, including headache, movement disorders and other neurological symptoms and diagnoses. The study also determined that the more medical complexity -- having additional diseases -- was associated with increased patient satisfaction with teleneurology. Older patients were as accepting of teleneurology as younger patients, individuals often viewed as more ...

Correcting biases in image generator models

2024-06-24
Image generator models – systems that produce new images based on textual descriptions – have become a common and well-known phenomenon in the past year. Their continuous improvement, largely relying on developments in the field of artificial intelligence, makes them an important resource in various fields.   To achieve good results, these models are trained on vast amounts of image-text pairs – for example, matching the text "picture of a dog" to a picture of a dog, repeated millions of times. Through this training, ...

How cells boost gene expression

How cells boost gene expression
2024-06-24
The function of non-coding RNA in the cell has long been a mystery to researchers. Unlike coding RNA, non-coding RNA does not produce proteins – yet it exists in large quantities. A research team from the University of Göttingen has now discovered an important function of antisense RNA (asRNA): the researchers found that asRNA acts as a "superhighway" in cell transport and thus accelerates gene expression. The results were published in Nature.   RNA (ribonucleic acid) plays a central role in the translation of DNA information into proteins. There are different types of RNA, one of which is known as messenger ...

Meet CARMEN, a robot that helps people with mild cognitive impairment

Meet CARMEN, a robot that helps people with mild cognitive impairment
2024-06-24
Video: https://youtu.be/bGKA32TlVXM?si=0PdhaUyOKH33DFbB Meet CARMEN, short for Cognitively Assistive Robot for Motivation and Neurorehabilitation–a small, tabletop robot designed to help people with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) learn skills to improve memory, attention, and executive functioning at home.  Unlike other robots in this space, CARMEN was developed by the research team at the University of California San Diego in collaboration with clinicians, people with MCI, and their care partners. To the best of the researchers’ knowledge, CARMEN is also the only robot that teaches compensatory cognitive strategies to help improve memory and executive function. “We ...

NYU creates Center for Mind, Ethics, and Policy

2024-06-24
New York University has established the Center for Mind, Ethics, and Policy, which aims to further our understanding of the sentience and moral status of nonhumans, notably animals and AI systems.  “The world contains quintillions of animals, and in the future, it could contain an even larger number of AI systems,” says Jeff Sebo, CMEP’s founding director and a professor in NYU’s Department of Environmental Studies. “Human activity is increasingly shaping the lives of these beings, and these trends raise important and difficult questions, such as: Which of these beings are sentient, ...

New mathematical proof helps to solve equations with random components

2024-06-24
Whether it’s physical phenomena, share prices or climate models – many dynamic processes in our world can be described mathematically with the aid of partial differential equations. Thanks to stochastics – an area of mathematics which deals with probabilities – this is even possible when randomness plays a role in these processes. Something researchers have been working on for some decades now are so-called stochastic partial differential equations. Working together with other researchers, Dr. Markus Tempelmayr ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

National Multiple Sclerosis Society awards Dr. Manuel A. Friese the 2025 Barancik Prize for Innovation in MS Research

PBM profits obscured by mergers and accounting practices, USC Schaeffer white paper shows

Breath carries clues to gut microbiome health

New study links altered cellular states to brain structure

Palaeontology: Ancient giant kangaroos could hop to it when they needed to

Decoded: How cancer cells protect themselves from the immune system

ISSCR develops roadmap to accelerate pluripotent stem cell-derived therapies to patients

New study shows gut microbiota directly regulates intestinal stem cell aging

Leading cancer deaths in people younger than 50 years

Rural hospital bypass by patients with commercial health insurance

Jumping giants: Fossils show giant prehistoric kangaroos could still hop

Missing Medicare data alters hospital penalties, study finds

Experimental therapy targets cancer’s bodyguards, turning foe to friend to eliminate tumors

Discovery illuminates how inflammatory bowel disease promotes colorectal cancer

Quality and quantity? The clinical significance of myosteatosis in various liver diseases

Expert consensus on clinical applications of fecal microbiota transplantation for chronic liver disease (2025 edition)

Insilico Medicine to present three abstracts at the 2026 Crohn’s & Colitis Congress highlighting clinical, preclinical safety, and efficacy data for ISM5411, a novel gut-restricted PHD1/2 inhibitor fo

New imaging technology detects early signs of heart disease through the skin

Resurrected ancient enzyme offers new window into early Earth and the search for life beyond it

People with obesity may have a higher risk of dementia

Insilico Medicine launches science MMAI gym to train frontier LLMs into pharmaceutical-grade scientific engines

5 pre-conference symposia scheduled ahead of International Stroke Conference 2026

To explain or not? Need for AI transparency depends on user expectation

Global prevalence, temporal trends, and associated mortality of bacterial infections in patients with liver cirrhosis

Scientists discover why some Central Pacific El Niños die quickly while others linger for years

CNU research explains how boosting consumer trust unlocks the $4 billion market for retired EV batteries

Reimagining proprioception: when biology meets technology

Chungnam National University study finds climate adaptation can ease migration pressures in Africa

A cigarette compound-induced tumor microenvironment promotes sorafenib resistance in hepatocellular carcinoma via the 14-3-3η-modified tumor-associated proteome

Brain network disorders study provides insights into the role of molecular chaperones in neurodegenerative diseases

[Press-News.org] Rising health care prices are driving unemployment and job losses