Publication | Closed Access
Exit and Inefficiency: The Effects of Ownership Type
54
Citations
10
References
2000
Year
Ownership TypeOwnership TheoryHospital ClosuresOrganizational EconomicsEducationIndustrial OrganizationProductivityManagementGovernment FirmsHospital ExitQuantitative ManagementEconomicsOwnership StructureCorporate GovernanceEconomic EvaluationFinanceMarket FailureHealth EconomicsBusinessEconometricsBusiness StrategyHealth Care CostFinancingCorporate Finance
This study uses data on hospital closures to examine the relation between exit and inefficiency in an industry where for-profit, not-for-profit, and government firms coexist. The likelihood of hospital exit over the period 1986-91 is estimated as a function of hospital relative inefficiency, ownership type, and other factors, where hospital relative inefficiency is measured using residuals from estimation of a stochastic frontier cost function. We find that less efficient hospitals were more likely to exit when ownership was for-profit or not-for-profit, but that relative inefficiency did not have a significant effect on the probability of exit for government hospitals.
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