The pricing behavior of non-profit hospitals is an important issue given the size of the non-profit hospital sector in relation to the for-profit sector. It is generally accepted in the literature that for-profit hospitals set higher prices than their non-profit counterparts. However, there is disagreement over the relative behavior of the different types of hospital in the presence of market power. Some authors argue that market power causes hospitals to maintain higher prices regardless of their ownership, while others argue that greater levels of market power are associated with lower prices for non-profit hospitals. Clearly, how market concentration influences the pricing behavior of non-profits has implications for antitrust policy and...
This dissertation consists of four chapters each looking at one dimension of the impact of market co...
We study the effects of a hospital merger in a spatial competition framework where semi-altruistic h...
Hospital mergers challenge basic assumptions about the effects of market power in the health care in...
Scope and Method of Study: The main purpose of this study was to determine how hospital markets reac...
In the debate over whether non-profit and for-profit hospitals behave differently in the presence of...
We attempt to identify and evaluate the association between key characteristics of not-for-profit (N...
Hospital markets have become highly concentrated due to increasing numbers of mergers and acquisitio...
gratefully acknowledged. Any errors in the paper are my own. I exploit a change in hospital financia...
It is commonly believed that hospitals are able to maintain their financial health by responding to ...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Economics, c1999.Includes bibliograp...
Antitrust authorities treat price as a proxy for hospital quality since health care quality is diffi...
This study investigates the association between market structure and cost structure using a national...
textTheories of competitive for-profit firm behavior are well understood. However, in the hospital ...
There has been considerable consolidation in the hospital industry in recent years. Over 900 deals o...
Helen Schneider is with the Nicholas C. Petris Center on Health Care Markets and Consumer Welfare, U...
This dissertation consists of four chapters each looking at one dimension of the impact of market co...
We study the effects of a hospital merger in a spatial competition framework where semi-altruistic h...
Hospital mergers challenge basic assumptions about the effects of market power in the health care in...
Scope and Method of Study: The main purpose of this study was to determine how hospital markets reac...
In the debate over whether non-profit and for-profit hospitals behave differently in the presence of...
We attempt to identify and evaluate the association between key characteristics of not-for-profit (N...
Hospital markets have become highly concentrated due to increasing numbers of mergers and acquisitio...
gratefully acknowledged. Any errors in the paper are my own. I exploit a change in hospital financia...
It is commonly believed that hospitals are able to maintain their financial health by responding to ...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Economics, c1999.Includes bibliograp...
Antitrust authorities treat price as a proxy for hospital quality since health care quality is diffi...
This study investigates the association between market structure and cost structure using a national...
textTheories of competitive for-profit firm behavior are well understood. However, in the hospital ...
There has been considerable consolidation in the hospital industry in recent years. Over 900 deals o...
Helen Schneider is with the Nicholas C. Petris Center on Health Care Markets and Consumer Welfare, U...
This dissertation consists of four chapters each looking at one dimension of the impact of market co...
We study the effects of a hospital merger in a spatial competition framework where semi-altruistic h...
Hospital mergers challenge basic assumptions about the effects of market power in the health care in...