We study the effects of a hospital merger using a spatial competition framework with semialtruistic hospitals that invest in quality and expend cost-containment effort facing regulated prices. We find that the merging hospitals always reduce quality, whereas non-merging hospitals respond by increasing (reducing) quality if qualities are strategic substitutes (complements). A merger leads to higher average treatment cost efficiency and, if qualities are strategic substitutes, might also increase average quality in the market. If a merger leads to hospital closure, the resulting effect on quality is positive (negative) for all hospitals in the market if qualities are strategic substitutes (complements). Whether qualities are strategic ...
Healthcare is as much a business subject to market dynamics as it is a public service, with enormous...
textTheories of competitive for-profit firm behavior are well understood. However, in the hospital ...
Antitrust authorities treat price as a proxy for hospital quality since health care quality is diffi...
We study the effects of a hospital merger using a spatial competition framework with semialtruistic ...
We study the effects of a hospital merger in a spatial competition framework where semi-altruistic h...
Using a spatial competition framework with three ex ante identical hospitals, we study the effects o...
Hospitals merge to constrain costs and improve quality. Although hospital consolidation can yield su...
The appropriate role of merger efficiencies remains unresolved in US antitrust law and policy. The P...
Abstract- The US health care industry has undergone considerable consolidation, with mergers and acq...
Hospital mergers challenge basic assumptions about the effects of market power in the health care in...
The healthcare industry’s position within the American mixed economy has a complicated history. Heal...
In most studies on hospital merger effects, the unit of observation is the merged hospital, whereas ...
markdownabstractOver the past 15 years, all but one hospital mergers have been granted permission by...
Abstract This paper comments on “The Price Effects of Hospital Mergers: A Case Study of Sutter–Summi...
Background Despite a lack of supporting evidence, hospitals continue to merge in pursuit of quality ...
Healthcare is as much a business subject to market dynamics as it is a public service, with enormous...
textTheories of competitive for-profit firm behavior are well understood. However, in the hospital ...
Antitrust authorities treat price as a proxy for hospital quality since health care quality is diffi...
We study the effects of a hospital merger using a spatial competition framework with semialtruistic ...
We study the effects of a hospital merger in a spatial competition framework where semi-altruistic h...
Using a spatial competition framework with three ex ante identical hospitals, we study the effects o...
Hospitals merge to constrain costs and improve quality. Although hospital consolidation can yield su...
The appropriate role of merger efficiencies remains unresolved in US antitrust law and policy. The P...
Abstract- The US health care industry has undergone considerable consolidation, with mergers and acq...
Hospital mergers challenge basic assumptions about the effects of market power in the health care in...
The healthcare industry’s position within the American mixed economy has a complicated history. Heal...
In most studies on hospital merger effects, the unit of observation is the merged hospital, whereas ...
markdownabstractOver the past 15 years, all but one hospital mergers have been granted permission by...
Abstract This paper comments on “The Price Effects of Hospital Mergers: A Case Study of Sutter–Summi...
Background Despite a lack of supporting evidence, hospitals continue to merge in pursuit of quality ...
Healthcare is as much a business subject to market dynamics as it is a public service, with enormous...
textTheories of competitive for-profit firm behavior are well understood. However, in the hospital ...
Antitrust authorities treat price as a proxy for hospital quality since health care quality is diffi...