Publication | Open Access
Competition Among Hospitals
192
Citations
11
References
2003
Year
Unknown Venue
Ownership TypeCalifornia HospitalsLawHealth Care ManagementIndustrial OrganizationHospital MedicinePricing PolicyManagementEconomic AnalysisService CompetitionEconomicsMergers And AcquisitionsPrice FormationFinanceHealth EconomicsHospital IndustryHospital EnvironmentPatient SafetyBusinessHealth Services CompetitionMarket PowerMicroeconomics
We examine competition in the hospital industry, in particular the effect of ownership type (for-profit, not-for-profit, government). We estimate a structural model of demand and pricing in the hospital industry in California, then use the estimates to simulate the effect of a merger. California hospitals in 1995 face an average price elasticity of demand of -4.85. Not-for-profit hospitals face less elastic demand and act as if they have lower marginal costs. Their prices are lower than those of for-profits, but markups are higher. We simulate the effects of the 1997 merger of two hospital chains. In San Luis Obispo County, where the merger creates a near monopoly, prices rise by up to 53%, and the predicted price increase would not be substantially smaller were the chains not-for-profit.
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