01181nam a22001217a 4500008004100000100005300041245009600094260004500190300003100235520070400266650004400970773004501014221226b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d aGross, Tal, Layton, Timothy J. and Prinz, Daniel aThe liquidity sensitivity of healthcare consumption: Evidence from social security payments aThe American Economic Review: Insights  a4(2), Jun, 2022: p.175-190 aInsurance is typically viewed as a mechanism for transferring resources from good to bad states. However, insurance may also transfer resources from high-liquidity periods to low-liquidity periods. We test for this type of transfer from health insurance by studying the distribution of Social Security checks among Medicare recipients. When Social Security checks are distributed, prescription fills increase by 6–12 percent among recipients who pay small copayments. We find no such pattern among recipients who face no copayments. The results demonstrate that more complete insurance allows recipients to consume healthcare when they need it rather than only when they have cash. – Reproduced  aHealthcare consumption, Social security aThe American Economic Review: Insights