Cohen Nissim
a Department of Management and Economics, The Open University of Israel, Raanana 43107, Israel.
Health Econ Policy Law. 2012 Jul;7(3):285-308. doi: 10.1017/S1744133111000089. Epub 2011 May 5.
This paper reviews current research and literature on the issue of informal payments for health care and its context and suggests a new perspective for a better understanding of this phenomenon. This perspective, based on political culture and behavior and on wider social processes, is already used to explain various phenomena from different fields of public policy. The paper explains the impact of a specific type of political culture, called 'alternative politics' (AP) in the Israeli literature, on healthcare policy and institutional healthcare settings. AP is based on a 'do-it-yourself' approach adopted by citizens to address their dissatisfaction with governmental services. When such a mode of political culture is diffused to all sectors and levels of society, all players, including bureaucrats and politicians, are guided by short-term considerations and apply unilateral strategies that bypass formal rules either through illegal activity or by marginalizing formal rules. Explaining informal payments by analyzing social processes and political culture and behavior has some disadvantages, but it provides us with a better understanding of the phenomenon while covering most of its characteristics and configurations.
本文回顾了关于医疗保健领域非正式支付问题及其背景的当前研究和文献,并提出了一个新的视角,以便更好地理解这一现象。这一基于政治文化与行为以及更广泛社会进程的视角,已被用于解释公共政策不同领域的各种现象。本文解释了以色列文献中所称的一种特定政治文化类型——“另类政治”(AP)对医疗政策和机构医疗环境的影响。AP基于公民采取的“自己动手”方式,以表达他们对政府服务的不满。当这种政治文化模式扩散到社会的所有部门和层面时,所有参与者,包括官僚和政治家,都会受短期考量的引导,并采用单边策略,通过非法活动或边缘化正式规则来绕过正式规则。通过分析社会进程、政治文化与行为来解释非正式支付存在一些缺点,但它能让我们在涵盖该现象的大多数特征和形态的同时,更好地理解这一现象。