Health Economics
An Industrial Organization perspective
Pedro Pita Barros and
Xavier Martinez-Giralt
Contents
List of figures xi
List of tables xiii
Preface xv
Notations xvi
Acknowledgments xviii
PART I
Principles of economics 1
1 Introduction 3
2 Demand 5
2.1 The elements of the consumer problem 6
2.2 Demand function 9
2.3 Market demand 21
3 Supply 23
3.1 Introduction 23
3.2 The set of production possibilities 23
3.3 The production function 23
3.4 The cost function 27
3.5 Technical rate of substitution and elasticity of substitution 28
3.6 Marginal and average cost functions 30
3.7 An example: the Cobb-Douglas production function 31
3.8 Returns to scale, economies of scale and economies of scope 32
3.9 Variable and fixed costs 34
3.10 Opportunity cost 34
3.11 Supply 35
4 Markets 39
4.1 The perfectly competitive market 40
4.2 Imperfect competition 46
viii Contents
5 Regulation 62
5.1 Natural monopoly 63
5.2 The Averch-Johnson effect 66
5.3 Multi-product monopolist 68
5.4 Public firms 69
5.5 Public goods 70
5.6 Externalities 71
5.7 Asymmetric information 74
5.8 Yardstick competition 79
5.9 Competition for the market 81
5.10 Instruments 81
5.11 Regulating the health care market 83
6 Mergersandacquisitions 86
6.1 Introduction 86
6.2 Horizontal mergers 87
6.3 Vertical mergers 92
6.4 Conglomerate mergers 96
6.5 M&A failure 97
7 For-profitandnonprofitorganizations 100
7.1 Why do nonprofit organizations exist? 101
7.2 Modeling nonprofit organizations 102
7.3 Empirical evidence 111
7.4 What do nonprofit hospitals maximize? 112
PART II
Health care 114
8 Essentialconceptsinhealtheconomics 116
8.1 Differential characteristics of health economics 119
8.2 The organization of the health care market 121
8.3 Structure of a health care system 123
9 Demandforhealthandhealthcare 128
9.1 Value of life and of quality of life 128
9.2 Demand for health 135
10 Insurance 160
10.1 Basic concepts 160
10.2 Risk and uncertainty 163
10.3 Insurance 167
Contents ix
11 Contracts and asymmetric information 180
11.1 The problem of information 180
11.2 Imperfect information and competition 184
11.3 Incentives in the health care sector 184
11.4 Asymmetric information and conflict of objectives 187
11.5 Time-consistent contracts 206
11.6 Supplier-induced demand 210
PART III
IO in Health care 216
12 Competition in health care markets 218
12.1 Payment systems 218
12.2 Upcoding 226
12.3 Competition on quality 228
12.4 Technology adoption and medical arms’ race 237
13 Public and private provision 242
13.1 Mixed markets 242
13.2 Public-Private Partnerships 246
13.3 Moonlighting 253
14 Bargaining 256
14.1 A primer in bargaining theory 256
14.2 Bargaining in health care markets 261
14.3 The institutional setting 271
14.4 Bargaining within a national health service 274
14.5 Ways to enhance bargaining power 282
14.6 Empirical evidence 285
15 Waiting lists 288
15.1 The mechanics of waiting lists 289
15.2 Waiting time as an equilibrium device 291
15.3 Selecting from a waiting list 293
15.4 The perverse incentives of waiting lists 294
15.5 Policy interventions aimed at waiting lists 296
16 Referrals, gatekeeping and levels of care 298
16.1 The referral externality 299
16.2 Vertical integration vs market mechanism 300
16.3 Gatekeeping 304
17 Pharmaceutical market 306
17.1 R&D and patents 306
x Contents
17.2 Market access 307
17.3 International reference pricing 308
17.4 Making sense of Phase IV trials 311
17.5 Generics substitutions 311
17.6 Domestic reference pricing 312
17.7 The generics paradox 314
17.8 Retail pharmacy 316
Notes 320
References 324
Index 338

1 \01\+00:00 Novembro \01\+00:00 2011 às 14:12
Nice contents:)
Waiting…!
GostarGostar