As publicly funded health insurance shifts more toward coverage of working
families of low and moderate incomes, there has been growing interest in be
neficiary cost sharing in the form of sliding-scale premiums. In the 1990s,
Hawaii, Minnesota, Tennessee, and Washington initiated expansion programs
that used sliding-scale premiums for working-class families. The experience
in these states indicates that it is feasible to require cost sharing of p
remiums, but there are a number of design and operational complexities. A p
reliminary analysis indicates that, as expected, higher out-of-pocket premi
um shares were associated with lower participation rates.