1 / 20

Do Children of Immigrant Parents Assimilate into Public Health Insurance? A Dynamic Analysis

Do Children of Immigrant Parents Assimilate into Public Health Insurance? A Dynamic Analysis. by Julie Hudson Yuriy Pylypchuk August 10, 2009. Background. Insurance status among children with native parents (2005) 67% private 28% public 4% uninsured

penny
Download Presentation

Do Children of Immigrant Parents Assimilate into Public Health Insurance? A Dynamic Analysis

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Do Children of Immigrant Parents Assimilate into Public Health Insurance? A Dynamic Analysis by Julie Hudson Yuriy Pylypchuk August 10, 2009

  2. Background • Insurance status among children with native parents (2005) • 67% private • 28% public • 4% uninsured • Insurance status among children with at least one foreign born parent (2005) • 48% private • 40% public • 12% uninsured

  3. Background • Children of immigrant parents are more likely to participate in public coverage than natives by 12 percentage points • consistent with immigrant participation in other public programs (AFDC, Food Stamps) • Public issue • Cost implications for Medicaid and SCHIP • Lack of coverage prevents access to care among children => future burden?

  4. Key Issue • Does a child’s participation in public coverage depend on his/her parent’s stay in the U.S? • The propensity to participate can increase, decrease, or remain the same with parents length of stay in the U.S. • If decreases => children of immigrant parents assimilate out of public coverage • If increases => children of immigrant parents exhibit increasing welfare dependence (found among adults for AFDC/TANF)

  5. Study Objectives • Does a parent’s length of stay in the U.S affect eligible children’s propensities to • Enter into public coverage • Retain public coverage • Are there differential effects of immigration- citizenship status of Mothers versus Fathers? • What is the role of a child’s own immigration- citizenship status for entry/retention? • How do immigration characteristics affect a child’s participation in public coverage in the steady state

  6. Literature • Borjas and Trejo (1991), Wei-Yin Hu (1997) • Adult immigrants assimilate into welfare programs in the U.S. • Hanson and Lofstrom., 2003 • Immigrants assimilate out of welfare in Sweden • Currie 2000, Buchmuler et al., 2008 • SCHIP expansion increased participation in public coverage among children with foreign born household heads • Ham et al., 2008. • Transitions among private, pubic, and no insurance. No immigrants characteristics in the model. Hispanics are more likely to enter public coverage

  7. Data • Medical Expenditures Panel Survey (MEPS), Years 1996-2005, panels 1-9 • 0-17 year old children • Eligible for Medicaid or CHIP • Model quarterly transitions from and to public coverage over two year period • Exclude • children with missing coverage for 3 months in a row • children who appeared in survey for 3 months or less • children without any parent or head of the household • Eligibility criteria varies annually

  8. Data • Information about immigrants is extracted from National Health Interview Survey • In all models we control for • State quarterly unemployment rate • Cohort effects • Parent education and health status • Children’s health status, region and MSA, race and age • All models are estimated separately for two and one parent households

  9. Model • Hazard of entering public coverage • M - years of stay in the U.S • Hazard of retaining public coverage • Do not control for initial conditions • Do not control for unobserved heterogeneity

  10. Steady state • Let R be 2X2 transition matrix, where the element of the matrix, represents the predicted probability of moving from state k to state j • Let P denote the row vector of participating in public coverage or having other insurance status in steady state • To find element in matrix P, solve • The effect of the binary covariate, X, on steady-state probability is simply • The expression informs us of the long run effects of a specific covariate on the likelihood of being in public coverage

  11. Parent Characteristics of Eligible Children by Parental Nativity & Stay in the U.S. Significantly different from Both Native: * 10% **5% ***1%

  12. Transition Matrix Mean Probability of Transition

  13. Discrete Hazard Results: Father’s Stay - 2 Parent HH & Comparison group: Children with two Native Parents

  14. Discrete Hazard Results: Mother’s Stay - 2 Parent HH & Comparison group: Children with two Native Parents

  15. Discrete Hazard Results: Other Characteristics - 2 Parent HH

  16. Discrete Hazard Results: Parent Stay - 1 Parent HH Comparison group: Native Parent

  17. Steady State (Probability Enrolled)by Parent’s Stay: 2 Parent HH

  18. Steady State (Probability Enrolled) by Parent Stay: 1 Parent HH

  19. Conclusions and Policy Implications • Overall, participation rates among children of immigrant and native born parents are very similar • Differences depend on household structure and nativity status of a mother or father • Hazard of Entry into public coverage • decreases for children with citizen immigrant father • increases for children with non-citizen immigrant mother • Hazard of Retaining public coverage • Does not depend on the nativity status of child’s father • Decreases for children with non-citizen immigrant mother • For one parent households, children with a foreign born parent exhibit assimilation out of public coverage

  20. Conclusions and Policy Implications • Higher parental education and being an immigrant child affect entry into and retention of public coverage • Education – attitudes to public porgrams and/or job opportunities? • Foreign born child - Chilling effect? • Overall, results are robust to alternative specifications • No evidence of assimilation into public coverage among children with foreign born parents • Contrary to the literature on adult immigrants’ participation in welfare programs

More Related