Once again federal employees are likely going to be on the hook if lawmakers cannot agree to a spending plan to keep the government running. Regardless of what happens, federal workers, such as TSA officers, will likely feel the effect if the government shuts down.
Evidence from Massachusetts suggests that a multistep process discourages enrollment. The findings could help policymakers stave off a sharp decline in coverage when COVID-19 policies change.
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How an old Massachusetts policy kept people on health insurance
A now-defunct policy in Massachusetts designed to protect people from losing their state-sponsored health care insurance due to lapsed payments worked well, according to a new working paper published by the National Bureau of Economic Research and co-authored by several Harvard researchers.
The analysis found that the old state policy called “automatic retention” protected 14% of adults annually from losing health insurance coverage. Jose Figueroa, an assistant professor of health policy and management at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, highlighted the paper’s findings in an April 16, 2021, Tradeoffs article.