Abstract We analyse the properties of optimal price adjustment to hospitals when no lump-sum transfers are allowed and when prices differ to reflect observable exogenous differences in costs. We find that: (a) when the marginal benefit from treatment is decreasing and the cost function is the power function, price adjustment for hospitals with higher costs is positive but partial; if the marginal benefit is constant, the price is identical across providers; (b) if the cost function is exponential or it is separable in monetary and non-monetary costs (and linear in monetary costs), price adjustment is positive even when the marginal benefit is constant; (c) higher inequality aversion of the purchaser increases concentration in prices and low...
textabstractIn most studies on hospital merger effects, the unit of observation is the merged hospit...
Recent empirical evidence establishes previous use as a strong predictor of patient choice of hospit...
The paper studies hospital competition in a spatially differentiated market in which patient demand ...
Prospective payment systems are currently used in many OECD countries, where hospitals are paid a fi...
It is commonly believed that hospitals are able to maintain their financial health by responding to ...
This paper examines hospital responses to changes in diagnosis-specific prices by exploiting a 1988 ...
This paper derives a two-stage model of hospital competition under price regulation and full insuran...
We estimate a preference function which rationalizes hospital referrals for privately-insured birth ...
This paper examines the behaviour of public hospitals in response to the average payment incentives ...
Modern hospitals are complex multi-product organisations. The analysis of a hospital's production an...
Cost shifting occurs when changes in administered prices of one payer lead to compensating changes i...
The pricing behavior of non-profit hospitals is an important issue given the size of the non-profit ...
We analyse the effect of competition on quality in hospital markets with regulated prices, consideri...
We study how changes in Diagnosis\u2010Related Group price regulation affect hospital behaviour in q...
This paper examines hospital responses to changes in diagnosis-specific prices by exploiting a 1988 ...
textabstractIn most studies on hospital merger effects, the unit of observation is the merged hospit...
Recent empirical evidence establishes previous use as a strong predictor of patient choice of hospit...
The paper studies hospital competition in a spatially differentiated market in which patient demand ...
Prospective payment systems are currently used in many OECD countries, where hospitals are paid a fi...
It is commonly believed that hospitals are able to maintain their financial health by responding to ...
This paper examines hospital responses to changes in diagnosis-specific prices by exploiting a 1988 ...
This paper derives a two-stage model of hospital competition under price regulation and full insuran...
We estimate a preference function which rationalizes hospital referrals for privately-insured birth ...
This paper examines the behaviour of public hospitals in response to the average payment incentives ...
Modern hospitals are complex multi-product organisations. The analysis of a hospital's production an...
Cost shifting occurs when changes in administered prices of one payer lead to compensating changes i...
The pricing behavior of non-profit hospitals is an important issue given the size of the non-profit ...
We analyse the effect of competition on quality in hospital markets with regulated prices, consideri...
We study how changes in Diagnosis\u2010Related Group price regulation affect hospital behaviour in q...
This paper examines hospital responses to changes in diagnosis-specific prices by exploiting a 1988 ...
textabstractIn most studies on hospital merger effects, the unit of observation is the merged hospit...
Recent empirical evidence establishes previous use as a strong predictor of patient choice of hospit...
The paper studies hospital competition in a spatially differentiated market in which patient demand ...