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Economics 415 Health Care Economics

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A Review of Basic Economics. Health Economics Data and Journals ... Assumptions clear away unimportant or non-critical bits of information. Ceteris paribus thinking ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Economics 415 Health Care Economics


1
Economics 415Health Care Economics
  • A Review of Basic Economics

2
Health Economics Data and Journals
  • http//www.nicholls.edu/mcoats/Health20Care20Eco
    nomics20Syllabus.htm
  • http//www.nicholls.edu/mcoats/Health20Care20Eco
    nomics20Syllabus.htm

3
Economics Review
  • The Economic Approach
  • Model it! Break down what we are discussing into
    understandable pieces and put the pieces back
    together
  • Make assumptions
  • Observe
  • Develop theory
  • Derive hypotheses from theory
  • Observe phenomena to see if hypotheses improve
    predictions

4
Economics Review
  • Models are embodiments of assumptions
  • Models simplify so we can understand
  • Model is the theory!
  • Assumptions clear away unimportant or
    non-critical bits of information
  • Ceteris paribus thinking

5
Economics Review
  • Key Assumptions in Economics
  • Scarcity and competition (setting)
  • Rational or self-interested behavior (motivation)
  • Self-interested behavior is optimizing behavior
    (predictable behavior)

6
Economics Review
  • Optimizing behavior
  • Constrained optimums
  • Marginal benefits and marginal costs

7
Markets Demand and Supply
  • Demand and Law of Demand
  • QD vs. D
  • Determinants of QD
  • Measuring Demand Elasticity
  • Supply and Law of Supply
  • QS vs. S
  • Determinants of QS
  • Measuring Supply Elasticy

8
Economics Review
  • Equilibrium
  • Prices higher than equilibrium
  • Prices lower than equilibrium
  • Speed of adjustment to equilibrium

9
Economics Review
  • Taxes and Subsidies
  • Taxes and Supply and Demand
  • Note on Taxes and Incidence
  • Subsidy?
  • Health Insurance

10
Economics Review
  • Markets Demand and Supply
  • Demand and Law of Demand
  • Supply and Law of Supply
  • Measuring Supply and Demand Elasticity
  • Equilibrium and Market Adjustment
  • Taxes, Subsidies and Health Insurance

11
Determinants of Quantity Demanded (QD)
  • Own Price (-)
  • Prices of Substitutes ()
  • Prices of Complements (-)
  • Income ( for normal gds., - for inferior gds.)
  • Expectations (prices, incomes)
  • Information
  • Number of Buyers

12
Quantity Supplied vs. Supply (QS vs. S)
  • Same story as with Demand
  • Quantity Supplied is a variable
  • Supply is a function or relationship between
    Price and Quantity Supplied

13
Determinants of Quantity Supplied (QS)
  • Own Price ()
  • Prices of Inputs (-)
  • Prices of Complements in Production or
    By-Products ()
  • Expectations
  • Technology (Information of Sellers)
  • Number of Sellers (special restrictions on
    entry?)

14
Measuring Supply and Demand Elasticity
  • Elasticity and Slope
  • Ratio of percentage changes instead of ratio of
    changes
  • ? ?QD/ ?P
  • ?QD/?P x P/Q
  • Unitless measurement
  • Price Elasticity of Demand
  • Average sensitivity of buyers to price changes
  • Elasticity and Substitutes and Complements

15
Measuring Supply and Demand Elasticity
  • Price Elasticity of Demand and Revenues
  • RP x QD
  • Law of Demand P QD move in opposite
    directions, if one goes up, the other goes down,
    CP
  • Marginal Revenue and Elasticity

16
Equilibrium
  • Prices higher than equilibrium
  • Prices lower than equilibrium
  • Speed of adjustment to equilibrium

17
Taxes, Subsidies and Health Insurance
  • Taxes and Supply and Demand
  • Note on Taxes and Incidence
  • Subsidies?
  • Health Insurance

18
ReviewEquilibrium
  • Prices higher than equilibrium
  • Prices lower than equilibrium
  • Speed of adjustment to equilibrium

19
Consumer Surplus
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A Subsidy for Buyers
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32
Competitive Markets
  • Homogeneous Product
  • Easy or Free Entry and Exit
  • Low-Cost or Costless Information
  • Atomistic CompetitionBuyers and Sellers so
    small, no single market participant has an effect
    on price

33
Competitive or Price-Taker Markets
34
Profit Maximization Marginal Costs and Marginal
Revenues
  • Profit Function
  • Profits Revenue Costs
  • Slope of Profit Function
  • Profit Slope Marginal Revenue Marginal Costs
  • Profits Max. where Marginal Revenues and Marginal
    Costs are Equal (slope of profits zero)

35
Prod. Surplus R - VC
Total Var. Costs (VC)
36
Supply MC
  • P MR (flat Demand of Price Takers)
  • MR MC (Profit Maximization)
  • QS of individual firm determined by Profit
    Maximization behavior of firm, so QS where PMC
  • Sum QS of all firms at each price (P MC)
  • Same as summing MC of firms
  • Supply is relationship between P and QS

37
Competitive Markets Profits and Entry
  • Fixed Costs include Opportunity Cost of Capital
  • If Producer Surplus gt Fixed Costs, then Profits gt
    0
  • PSR-VC
  • If R-VCgtFC, then R-VC-FCgt0
  • If Profits gt 0, then entry occurs, increasing
    Supply, pushing price down until Profits 0

38
Competitive Markets Profits and Exit
  • If Profits lt 0 (losses), then firms leave market
  • Supply falls
  • Price rises
  • Losses drop (profits rise) until Profits 0

39
Competitive Markets and Welfare
CS
PS
40
Competitive Markets and Efficiency
  • Entry occurs until Prices driven down to minimum
    average cost (short run and long run costs)
  • Producer and Consumer Surplus maximized

41
Market Imperfections
  • Supply Side Imperfections
  • Monopoly or High Entry Barriers
  • Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly
  • Demand Side Imperfections
  • Monopsony (lack of competition for inputs)

42
Price Taker Markets
43
Monopsonistic Markets
44
Other Market Imperfections
  • Public Goods
  • Externalities (e.g. vaccinations)
  • Information Problems (e.g. supplier-induced
    demand)
  • Incentive Problems

45
Can We Rely on the Market in Health Care? Do We
Need Government Intervention?
  • Critics of market argue
  • Market is insufficient to handle complex health
    care, patients have insufficient information
  • Social Good, too important to be left to market
  • Infectious diseases involve externalities,
    affecting (and infecting) others by their actions
  • Basing who gets medical care on ability to pay is
    wrong

46
Can We Rely on the Market in Health Care? Do We
Need Government Intervention?
  • Critics of Government intervention argue
  • Government run programs always cost more than
    ever imaginedMedicaid 9 billion in 1990
    forecast 65 billion actual
  • Medicare originally prohibited federal
    supervision or control over the practice of
    medicine of the manner in which medical services
    are provided.

47
Call for Health Care Reform
  • Spending, very high and climbing
  • 1553 billion 2002, 14.9 of GDP
  • Hospitals, 36.3 personal HC spending, but 3
    paid out-of-pocket
  • Physicians, 25.3 personal HC spending, 18 paid
    out-of-pocket
  • Drugs, about 15.9 personal HC spending, 40 paid
    out-of-pocket

48
Reasons for High HC Spending in US
  • High Income
  • Service Sector Cost Disease

49
Medical Care and Baumols Disease
  • Personal Service productivity growth
  • Medical care hard to standardize
  • Quality judged by time spent
  • Manufacturing productivity growth
  • Productivity, Wages and Opportunity Cost

50
Access
  • 42 million Americans with no HC insurance in 2002
  • But most in age categories that use very little
    medical services, 18-34
  • No insurance not same as no access, uninsured
    receive 60 of HC per capita of that received by
    insured
  • Universal Coverage vs. Universal Access to
    insurance (mandatory vs. voluntary)

51
Outcomes
  • Life Expectancy
  • Infant Mortality
  • Death Rates in Leading Causes of Death
  • Life Expectancy at 65
  • Hospital Stays
  • Hospital Beds
  • Physicians

52
Commonly Cited Health Indicators, 2000
53
Mortality Ratios, 1997Death Rate/Disease
Incidence
54
Other Important Health Indicators, 2000
55
Efficiency
  • TechnicalProduce at Lowest Cost
  • AllocativeMaximize Producer and Consumer
    Surplus, Leave no mutually profitable trade
    unmade

56
Equity
  • Fairness
  • Equal results substantive fairness
  • Equal opportunity procedural fairness
  • How can results be different but still have equal
    opportunity?
  • Taking a test, playing a football game, earning
    income
  • Unequal bargaining power
  • Special market protection

57
Market Imperfections
  • Market Power
  • Monopoly (Supply Side)
  • Monopsony (Demand Side)
  • Public Goods
  • Externalities (e.g. vaccinations and infectious
    diseases)
  • Information Problems (e.g. supplier-induced
    demand)
  • Incentive Problems

58
Causes of Market Power
  • Entry Barriers
  • Natural Economies of Scale and Scope
  • Not Natural, But Defensible Patents to induce
    technology growth
  • Not Natural and Less Defensible Special
    protection for certain types of firms or
    occupations, licensing

59
Monopoly Markets
60
Monopsonistic Markets
61
Other Market Imperfections
  • Externalities (e.g. pollution, vaccinations)
  • Public Goods
  • Information Problems (e.g. supplier-induced
    demand)
  • Incentive Problems

62
Externalities harm or help through others (3rd
parties) actions
  • Pecuniary (competition) not a market failure
  • If all costs and benefits accrue to buyers and
    sellers in a market, but seller 1 undercuts
    seller 2s price, seller 2 harmed but
  • Positive (help or external benefits) or Negative
    (harm or external costs)
  • Production or Consumption

63
Externality
  • Negative Externality--Producer or consumer not
    fully responsible for costs they impose on
    others, e.g. Pollution, Smokingless would be
    better
  • Positive ExternalityProducer or consumer not
    fully compensated for benefits they producemore
    would be better
  • Property Rights
  • Externalities are reciprocal whose rights?
  • Transactions Costs

64
Negative Externality
QS
Qp
65
Positive Externality
Qp
Qs
66
Public Goods
  • Public Provision of Health Care, But Is It a
    Public Good?
  • Public Goods (incentives arent there for market
    to provide even though there are gains from
    trade)
  • vs. Private Goods (incentives are there for
    market to provide if there are gains from trade)

67
Public Goods
  • Characteristics of Public Goods
  • Non-rival goods (shared consumption)
  • Non-excludable goods (too costly to prohibit
    access to non-payers)
  • Public Good special case of Positive
    Externality
  • What type of health care meets public good
    definition?
  • Research, Charity

68
Government Correcting the Market for
Externalities and Public Goods
  • Positive Externalitiessubsidy or government
    provision? (Waldo)

69
Correcting for Negative Externality
70
Correcting for Public Goods
  • Just like positive externality, but extreme,
    shared by so many
  • Government provision, and taxation to pay

71
Information Problems
  • Costly Information and Advertising
  • Gasoline and eyeglasses
  • Information Asymmetries
  • Supplier Induced Demand (Agency)
  • Adverse Selection and Medicare
  • Third-party payers--moral hazard

72
Merit Goods
  • Assumption People dont know whats good for
    them or whats bad for them
  • Merit Goods are things that are good for
    people, even if they dont recognize itbenefits
    no fully appreciated by general public
  • Merit goods Medical Care, checkups, but also
    Opera, Avant-garde art
  • Demerit goods alcohol, tobacco, sex, drugs and
    rock n roll
  • Who is to say what is or is not good for us?
    Anything can be a merit good, no real standards

73
Merit Good
  • Peoples Demand Lower than an Expert Buyer

74
Physician-induced Demand
  • Payment schemes influence this
  • Fee-for-service vs. HMO type capitation payments

75
Supplier-induced or Physician-induced Demand
76
Entry Barriers and Licensing
  • Rationale for Licensing Physicians
  • Alternatives?
  • Rationale for Certificates of Needsame as with
    public utilities, to prevent costly duplication
  • Consequences?

77
Prices
  • Medicare/Medicaid Early on Usual, Customary
    and Reasonable Charges Charge Minimum of
  • UsualDrs usual fee, median last year
  • CustomaryFees of other Drs in the area
  • No incentive to charge less than competitors, fee
    creep
  • Now, Relative Value ScaleBases fees on resource
    use, allowing more for evaluation and patient
    management, less for invasive procedures
  • Prospective Payments for Hospitalspayment based
    on Principal Diagnosis, provide service for less
    than payment, hospital profits, more, hospital
    loses

78
Other Government Regulation--FDA
  • Rationale?
  • Entry Barrier
  • Speed of Approval
  • Benefits and Costs of Regulation
  • Apparent Benefits vs. Hidden Costs
  • Fen-Phen???
  • Prevention of helpful drugs
  • Effects of technology emphasis

79
Tax Policy Influences
  • Some non-wage benefits not taxable
  • Incentives to firms
  • What kind of employees do firms want to provide
    HC insurance for?

80
Government Failure
  • Regulatory capture
  • Self-serving and self-perpetuating bureaucracies
  • Voters are ignorant, just as HC buyers are

81
Can Medical Markets Work?
  • Buyers must be well informed and able to
    understand their options
  • Competition among sellers is important
  • Buyers must have money to spend
  • Cost-conscious behavior on the part of both
    buyers and sellers is essential
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