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When Antitrust Fails: Public Health, Public Hospitals, and Public Values

 |  February 17, 2015

Posted by Social Science Research Network

When Antitrust Fails: Public Health, Public Hospitals, and Public Values–  Michael S. Jacobs (DePaul University)

Abstract: Current antitrust thinking is ill-equipped to resolve the conflict between consumer welfare and the well-being of the poor. In most markets, this conflict is analytically irrelevant: antitrust normally regards the poor as not “entitled” to most goods or services. But healthcare is different. Because antitrust enforcement policy ignores this difference, it mistakenly assumes that lower prices inevitably enhance social welfare. The economic principles that inform antitrust analysis are blind to the concerns of public hospitals. Moreover, institutional constraints, such as rules of standing and of evidence, along with traditional notions about the limits of judicial competence, foreclose antitrust: courts from undertaking the kinds of wide-ranging inquiries necessary to comprehend and remedy the competitive disadvantages of public hospitals. As a result, antitrust policy overlooks the “market” for public health, a shortcoming that marks not just a failure of antitrust policy, but a failure of unregulated competition in the market for hospital services.