Jonathan Gruber and David Rodriguez have a startling conclusion


Our best estimate is that physicians provide negative uncompensated care to the uninsured, earning more on uninsured patients than on insured patients with comparable treatments. Even our most conservative estimates suggest that uncompensated care amounts to only 0.8% of revenues, or at most $3.2 billion nationally. These results highlight the important distinction between charges and payments, and point to the need for a re-definition of uncompensated care in the health sector going forward.


How are policymakers supposed to develop a comprehensive solution to health care if we can’t even define “uncompensated”?