Abstract

There is a broad literature on the consequences of applying different welfare standards in merger control. Total welfare is usually defined as the sum of consumer and provider surplus, i.e., potential external effects are not considered. The general result is then that consumer welfare is a more restrictive standard than total welfare, which is advantageous in certain situations. This relationship between the two standards is not necessarily true when the merger has significant external effects. We model mergers on hospital markets and allow for not-profit-maximizing behavior of providers and mandatory health insurance. Mandatory health insurance detaches the financial and consumption side of health care markets, and the concept consumer in merger control becomes non-evident. Patients not visiting the merging hospitals still are affected by price changes through their insurance premiums. External financial effects emerge on not directly affected consumers. We show that applying a restricted interpretation of consumer (neglecting externality) in health care merger control can reverse the relation between the two standards; consumer welfare standard can be weaker than total welfare. Consequently, applying the wrong standard can lead to both clearing socially undesirable and to blocking socially desirable mergers. The possible negative consequences of applying a simple consumer welfare standard in merger control can be even stronger when hospitals maximize quality and put less weight on financial considerations. We also investigate the implications of these results for the practice of merger control.

Highlights

  • Competition authorities that need to decide on mergers have some leeway as to the criteria for their assessment of welfare

  • We show that applying a restricted interpretation of consumer in health care merger control can reverse the relation between the two standards; consumer welfare standard can be weaker than total welfare

  • We show that the externality effects on health care markets stemming from insurance can reverse the relationship between consumer welfare (CW) and total welfare (TW) standards, which questions the generality of literature claims

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Competition authorities that need to decide on mergers have some leeway as to the criteria for their assessment of welfare. Considering these characteristics of hospital markets, they compare the effects of a merger on consumer surplus (gain from hospital services minus co-payments paid by consumers), net social surplus (gain from hospital services minus price paid by the insurer) and gross social surplus (gains from hospital services minus costs born by hospitals) They model quality competition among hospitals, which may yield over-production of quality because of moral hazard or the non-profit nature of hospitals. The extended definition of ‘consumer’ that we use involves everyone affected by the merger (including the previously defined smaller group), which implies all people covered by the same insurance because, through the uniform premium they pay, they are affected by changes in the hospital prices. TW is defined as the difference of PW and the cost of its production, which equals the sum of the welfare of all groups in the society. Similar to the theoretical strand of the literature, we use TW as a benchmark

Objective function of hospitals
Results
DcÞ 1 þ
Conclusions
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.