Publication | Open Access
Towards Neo‐Bismarckian Health Care States? Comparing Health Insurance Reforms in Bismarckian Welfare Systems
131
Citations
7
References
2007
Year
Comparative Health SystemsPrivate Health CareHealth Insurance DesignHealth ReformHealth PoliticsFinancial ProtectionHealth Care FinanceHealth GovernancePolicy AnalysisHealth FinancingPublic HealthInsurance RegulationsCentral European Health SystemsInsuranceUniversal Health CareHealth Insurance ReformPublic PolicyEconomicsHealth PolicyHealth InsuranceHealth Insurance ReformsNational Health InsuranceAbstract GermanyHealth EconomicsEconomic PolicyStructural ChangesBusinessHealth Services CompetitionSocial PolicyBismarckian Welfare SystemsRegulation
Abstract Germany, France and the Netherlands all have specific ‘Bismarckian’ health insurance systems, which encounter different and specific problems (and solutions) from those of national health systems. Following a relatively similar trajectory, the three systems have gone through important changes: they now combine universalization through the state and marketization based on regulated competition; they associate more state control (directly or through agencies) and more competition and market mechanisms. Competition between insurers has gained importance in Germany and the Netherlands and the state is reinforcing its controlling capacities in France and Germany. Up to now, continental health insurance systems have remained, however, Bismarckian (they are still mainly financed by social contribution, managed by health insurance funds, they deliver public and private health care, and freedom is still higher than in national health systems), but a new ‘regulatory health care state’ is emerging. Those changes are embedded in the existing institutions since the aim of the reforms is more to change the logic of institutions than to change the institutions themselves. Hence, structural changes occur without revolution in the system.
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