Why some market reforms lack legitimacy in health care.

Market-oriented health policy reforms in the 1980s and 1990s generally included five kinds of proposals: increased cost sharing for patients through user fees, the separation of purchaser-provider functions, management reforms of hospitals, provider competition, and vouchers for purchasing health insurance. These policies are partly derived from agency theory and a model of managed competition in health insurance. The essay reviews the course of reform in five countries that had a national health service model in place in the late 1980s: Italy, New Zealand, Spain, Sweden, and the United Kingdom. Special consideration is given to New Zealand, where the market model was extensively adopted but short lived. In New Zealand, surveys and polls are compared to archival records of reformers' deliberations. Voters saw health care differently from elites, and voters particularly felt that health care was ill suited to commercialization. There are similarities across all five countries in what has been adopted and rejected. Some market reforms are more legitimate than others. Reforms based on resolving principal-agent problems, including purchaser-provider splits and managerial reforms, have been more successful, although cost sharing has not. Competition-based reforms in financing and to a lesser extent in provision have not gained legitimacy. Most voters in these countries see health care as different from other parts of the economy and view managerial reforms differently from policies that try to make health care more like other sectors.

[1]  R. Klein Governance for NHS foundation trusts , 2003, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[2]  D. Light Comparative institutional response to economic policy managed competition and governmentality. , 2001, Social science & medicine.

[3]  Joan Costa-Font,et al.  Power rather than path dependency? The dynamics of institutional change under health care federalism. , 2005, Journal of health politics, policy and law.

[4]  H. Demsetz,et al.  Production, Information Costs, and Economic Organization , 1975, IEEE Engineering Management Review.

[5]  R. Weaver The Politics of Blame Avoidance , 1986, Journal of Public Policy.

[6]  A. Anell,et al.  The monopolistic integrated model and health care reform: the Swedish experience. , 1996, Health policy.

[7]  I. Gaminde Priorities in healthcare: a perspective from Spain. , 1999, Health policy.

[8]  J. Nagel Social Choice in a Pluralitarian Democracy: The Politics of Market Liberalization in New Zealand , 1998, British Journal of Political Science.

[9]  R. Scheffler,et al.  An update on Spain's health care system: is it time for managed competition? , 2000, Health policy.

[10]  R. Saltman,et al.  Renovating the Commons: Swedish health care reforms in perspective. , 2005, Journal of Health Politics Policy and Law.

[11]  F. Taroni,et al.  The evolution of health-policy making in Italy. , 2005, Journal of health politics, policy and law.

[12]  Jens Meierhenrich Analogies at War , 2006 .

[13]  N Mays,et al.  New Zealand's new health sector reforms: back to the future? , 2001, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[14]  A. Tversky,et al.  Choices, Values, and Frames , 2000 .

[15]  D W Light,et al.  Managed competition, governmentality and institutional response in the United Kingdom. , 2001, Social science & medicine.

[16]  P. Pierson,et al.  [Dismantling of the welfare state]. , 2001, Tidsskrift for den Norske laegeforening : tidsskrift for praktisk medicin, ny raekke.

[17]  A. Enthoven Theory and practice of managed competition in health care finance , 1988 .

[18]  M. C. Jensen,et al.  Harvard Business School; SSRN; National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER); European Corporate Governance Institute (ECGI); Harvard University - Accounting & Control Unit , 1976 .

[19]  M Schlesinger,et al.  Is health care different? Popular support of federal health and social policies. , 1993, Journal of health politics, policy and law.

[20]  M. Rosenthal,et al.  Not afraid to blame: the neglected role of blame attribution in medical consumerism and some implications for health policy. , 2002, The Milbank quarterly.

[21]  M. Bayle,et al.  The People's Campaign against Health Care Counter-Reforms in Spain , 2001 .

[22]  Julian Le Grand Further tales from the British National Health Service. , 2002 .

[23]  I. Garzon The Institutional Context , 2006 .

[24]  D. Stone,et al.  Causal Stories and the Formation of Policy Agendas , 1989, Anthologie Kulturpolitik.