Varkevisser Marco, Schut Frederik T
1Associate Professor of Health Economics, Institute of Health Policy & Management (iBMG), Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
2Professor of Health Economics, Institute of Health Policy & Management (iBMG), Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
Health Econ Policy Law. 2012 Jul;7(3):363-81. doi: 10.1017/S1744133112000011. Epub 2012 Feb 21.
In markets where hospitals are expected to compete, preventive merger control aims to prohibit anticompetitive mergers. In the hospital industry, however, the standard method for defining the relevant market (SSNIP) is difficult to apply and alternative approaches have proven inaccurate. Experiences from the United States show that courts, by identifying overly broad geographic markets, have underestimated the anticompetitive effects of hospital mergers. We examine how geographic hospital markets are defined in Germany and the Netherlands where market-oriented reforms have created room for hospital competition. For each country, we discuss a landmark case where definition of the geographic market played a decisive role. Our findings indicate that defining geographic hospital markets in both countries is less complicated than in the United States, where antitrust analysis must take managed care organisations into account. We also find that different methods result in much more stringent hospital merger control in Germany than in the Netherlands. Given the uncertainties in defining hospital markets, the German competition authority seems to be inclined to avoid the risk of being too permissive; the opposite holds for the Dutch competition authority. We argue that for society the costs of being too permissive with regard to hospital mergers may be larger than the costs of being too stringent.
在预期医院会展开竞争的市场中,预防性合并控制旨在禁止反竞争合并。然而,在医院行业,界定相关市场的标准方法(SSNIP)难以应用,且已证明替代方法并不准确。美国的经验表明,法院通过确定过于宽泛的地理市场,低估了医院合并的反竞争效果。我们研究了在德国和荷兰如何界定医院地理市场,在这两个国家,市场化改革为医院竞争创造了空间。对于每个国家,我们都讨论了一个地理市场定义起到决定性作用的标志性案例。我们的研究结果表明,与美国相比,这两个国家界定医院地理市场的情况没那么复杂,在美国,反垄断分析必须考虑管理式医疗组织。我们还发现,不同的方法导致德国对医院合并的控制比荷兰更为严格。鉴于界定医院市场存在不确定性,德国竞争管理机构似乎倾向于避免过于宽松的风险;荷兰竞争管理机构则相反。我们认为,对社会而言,在医院合并问题上过于宽松的成本可能大于过于严格的成本。