ABSTRACT

Designed as a primary text for courses in health care economics and policy analysis, this comprehensive work places the issues and economic analysis of the health care industry in the context of market forces driving the industry, including negotiated markets, managed care, and the growing influence of oligopolies. Written in accessible prose, without the aid of technical jargon and mathematical formulations, the content is rich with applicable, understandable economic concepts and analysis, and examples of market failure and government involvement. Some of the major policy issues covered are drug pricing, Medicare and Medicaid reform, the medically uninsured, for-profit hospital monopoly price power, managed care competitive pricing, and new negotiated markets. The relevant economic concepts employed in the text include price elasticity of demand/supply, market structure from competitive to oligopolistic markets, monopoly pricing power, measures of health care inflation and the biases of the CPI, demand and supply factors, inverse relationship of present health care expenditures as a percentage of GDP, measures/concepts of efficiency, and the role of government in a market era.

chapter 1|12 pages

Introduction

Health Care Choices, Trade-Offs, and Ownership of Health Care Resources

chapter 2|24 pages

The Mix of Health Services

More Market and More Government?

chapter 3|20 pages

The Pricing of Drugs

Who Benefits and Who Pays?

chapter 4|33 pages

Managed Care

Revolution, Evolution, or Devolution?

chapter 5|23 pages

The Four “Cs” of the Uninsured

Causes, Characteristics, Consequences, and Corrections/Choices

chapter 6|20 pages

Medical and Health Savings Accounts

Schemes That You Can Love!

chapter 7|20 pages

The Medicare Reform School

Who Pays for the Rehabilitation?

chapter 8|12 pages

Conclusions and Policy Implications