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Markets and Medical Care: The United States, 1993-2005

Joseph White
Case Western Reserve University



Milbank Quarterly, Vol. 85, Issue 3, pp. 395-448, September 2007

Abstract:     
Many studies arguing for or against markets to finance medical care investigate market-oriented measures such as cost sharing. This article looks at the experience in the American medical marketplace over more than a decade, showing how markets function as institutions in which participants who are self-seeking, but not perfectly rational, exercise power over other participants in the market. Cost experience here was driven more by market power over prices than by management of utilization. Instead of following any logic of efficiency or equity, system transformations were driven by beliefs about investment strategies. At least in the United States' labor and capital markets, competition has shown little ability to rationalize health care systems because its goals do not resemble those of the health care system most people want.

Accepted Paper Series

Date posted: December 11, 2007 ; Last revised: March 03, 2008

Suggested Citation

White, Joseph, Markets and Medical Care: The United States, 1993-2005. Milbank Quarterly, Vol. 85, Issue 3, pp. 395-448, September 2007. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1067176 or doi:10.1111/j.1468-0009.2007.00494.x


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Joseph White (Contact Author)
Case Western Reserve University ( email )
10900 Euclid Ave.
Cleveland, OH 44106
United States
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