This material is for information purposes and does not constitute legal advice that is tailored to your own personal circumstances and should not replace legal advice of an attorney. Although we try our best to keep the information updated, the material is not guaranteed to be up to date or complete.
Skip to product information
Rate Regulation of Worker's Compensation Insurance:: How Price Controls Increase Costs - Paperback
$14.95
by Patricia M. Danson (Author), Scott E. Harrington (Author)
The authors demonstrate how regulation intended to control costs can exacerbate cost growth by subsidizing high-risk activities and firms at the expense of low-risk activities and firms.
Back Jacket
In the 1980s and the early 1990s, America's system of workers' compensation insurance was in trouble. As medical costs grew and benefits and compensable injuries expanded, costs of this insurance skyrocketed. In response, the states imposed price controls, but those controls caused unforeseen--and negative--consequences. The authors define the problems, trace the regulatory responses, and analyze the effects of rate regulation.
Number of Pages: 170
Dimensions: 0.59 x 8.5 x 5.35 IN
Illustrated: Yes
Publication Date: January 01, 1998