Marisol Rodríguez
University of Barcelona
13 Papers
149 Citations
Marisol Rodríguez is an academic researcher from University of Barcelona. The author has contributed to research in topics: Welfare & Multivariate probit model. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 13 publications. Previous affiliations of Marisol Rodríguez include University of La Laguna.
Chat about Author
Papers
Equity in the finance of health care: some further international comparisons
Adam Wagstaff,Eddy van Doorslaer,Hattem Van Der Burg,Samuel Calonge,Terkel Christiansen,Guido Citoni,Ulf-G Gerdtham,Michael Gerfin,Lorna Gross,Unto Häkinnen,Paul Johnson,Jürgen John,Jan Klavus,Claire Lachaud,Jørgen Lauritsen,Robert E. Leu,Brian Nolan,Encarna Peran,João Pereira,Carol Propper,Frank Puffer,Lise Rochaix,Marisol Rodríguez,Martin Schellhorn,Gun Sundberg,Olaf Winkelhake +25 more
TL;DR: This paper presents further international comparisons of progressivity of health care financing systems, modifying the methodology used there and achieving a higher degree of cross-country comparability in variable definitions, and updating and extending the cross-section of countries.
503
Redistributive effect, progressivity and differential tax treatment: Personal income taxes in twelve OECD countries
Adam Wagstaff,Eddy van Doorslaer,Hattem Van Der Burg,Samuel Calonge,Terkel Christiansen,Guido Citoni,Ulf-G Gerdtham,Michael Gerfin,Lorna Gross,Unto Häkinnen,Jürgen John,Paul Johnson,Jan Klavus,Claire Lachaud,Jørgen Lauridsen,Robert E. Leu,Brian Nolan,Encarna Peran,Carol Propper,Frank Puffer,Lise Rochaix,Marisol Rodríguez,Martin Schellhorn,Gun Sundberg,Olaf Winkelhake +24 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors decompose the redistributive effect of personal income taxes (PITs) of twelve OECD countries into four components: (i) an average rate effect, (ii) a departure from proportionality or progressivity, (iii) a horizontal equity effect and (iv) a reranking effect.
131
The effect of private insurance access on the choice of GP/specialist and public/private provider in Spain.
TL;DR: Using Spanish data from the National Health Survey of 1997, it is estimated that differences in insurance access is the main determinant of both, the choice of sector and the kind of physician contacted, giving rise to very different patterns of consumption of GP and specialist visits.
118
Changes in the Demand for Private Medical Insurance Following a Shift in Tax Incentives
TL;DR: A bivariate probit model is used to estimate the impact of the 1998 Spanish reform of the Personal Income Tax on the demand for PHI and the changes occurred within it, indicating that the total probability of buying PHI was not significantly affected.
•Posted Content
Changes in the demand for private medical insurance following a shift in tax incentives
TL;DR: The 1998 Spanish reform of the Personal Income Tax (PIT) eliminated the 15% deduction for private medical expenditures including payments on private health insurance (PHI) policies as discussed by the authors.
58