Northwestern Health Insurance Research Finds More Costs – Chicago News
Let’s explore some of the most interesting stories that have emerged from Chicago business schools this week.
Even for the Insured, a Hospital Stay Has Surprising Costs – Kellogg Insight
Health insurance is truly a magical mystery tour of breathtaking anxiety, sometimes worse than you might think! New research explores the consequences of hospitalization on insured versus uninsured patients, which “stretch well beyond out-of-pocket costs to include impacts on credit and long-term earnings.”
In a study co-authored by Northwestern Kellogg Associate Professor of Strategy Matthew Notowidigdo, UC-Santa Cruz’s Carlos Dobkin, and MIT’s Amy Finkelstein and Raymond Kluender, the researchers found that “those without insurance ended up, on average, with $6,000 more in unpaid debt four years after being hospitalized than if there had been no admission. That is 20-times higher than those with insurance, who averaged a $300 increase in such debt four years post-hospitalization.”
Notowidigdo writes:
“We could really see how a person’s financial picture evolved after they spent time in the hospital. Hospital admissions have both financial and labor market consequences that go well beyond out-of-pocket costs but may stop short of bankruptcy. Health insurance, while beneficial, doesn’t cover all of these well enough. Individuals and policymakers need to understand that.”
You can read the full article here.
Historically Black Schools Pay More to Issue Bonds, Researchers Find – Mendoza Ideas & News
A new Journal of Financial Economics paper finds that racial animus is the primary driver of why “historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs) pay higher fees to issue tax-exempt bonds than non-HBCUs.”
“What’s in a (School) Name? Racial Discrimination in Higher Education Bond Markets,” co-authored by Viola D. Hank Associate Professor of Finance at Notre Dame‘s Paul Gao, along with Drexel’s Casey Dougal, Duke’s William J. Mayer, and the University of Washington’s Christopher A. Parsons, found evidence that contradicts a passage from Milton Friedman’s book Capitalism and Freedom, which contends that “economic development deters the expression of discrimination, racial or otherwise.”
After the researchers reviewed underwriting fees—“the fees that underwriters charge a school to bring a bond offering to investors”—they discovered that “HBCU issuance costs were about 20 percent higher than for non-HBCUs,” largely due to the fact that it’s “more difficult for underwriters to find buyers for the HBCU bonds,” particularly in.
Louisiana, Alabama, and Mississippi, where HBCUs pay “underwriters three times more to place their bonds relative to HBCUs in other states.”
According to the article:
“The paper presents several potential solutions to the problem, from lowering the price point for investors to enter this market, to making the associated state tax benefit transferable, to a federal law that designates HBCU bonds as triple tax exempt, applying to federal, state and local taxes.”
You can read more about the research here.
Red Clover Reader Creates An Online Marketplace for Diverse, Educational Children’s Books – Gies School of Business Blog
The Gies-operated iVenture Accelerator enabled early stage education tech startup Red Clover Reader to secure $15,000 in marketing and product development funding.
Co-founded by University of Illinois students Melanie Keil (a master’s student in applied health sciences) and her fiancé Armand Tossou (a Ph.D. in applied economics), Red Clover Reader “solves the lack of cultural diversity in children’s literature by connecting parents and self-published and independent authors of children’s books on an online platform that facilitates the co-creation and dissemination of more culturally diverse and value-focused content.”
Toussou writes, “iVenture has been a tremendous help for us because it’s both an accelerator and incubator for top student ventures. It’s provided us with mentorship and connected us with a lot of people. It’s a cohort thing. We can interact with anyone on other teams in terms of feedback and connections.”
Red Clover Reader’s goal to capture 5 percent of the $1 billion market for books and related merchandise.
Toussou adds, “We are trying to help parents discover a better alternative to the content they find online that they don’t feel good about letting their kids consume.”
You can read the full article here.
Asset Pricing Paper by Booth Prof. Wins Top Conference and Doctoral Prizes
Michael Weber, assistant professor of Finance and Neubauer Family Faculty Fellow at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business, won a pair of awards from the European Finance Association. His paper, titled “Nominal Rigidities and Asset Pricing,” was named UBS Best Conference Paper and European Finance Association Best Doctoral Student Conference Paper. This made history as it was the first time a doctoral paper won the Conference Paper Prize. Continue reading…
Booth Prof. Honored with Distinguished Award
Christian Leuz, Joseph Sondheimer Professor of International Economics, Finance and Accounting at the Booth School of Business, is one of three recipients of the 2014 Distinguished Contribution to Accounting Literature Award. Continue reading…