University of Economics, Prague, and CERGE-EI Teaching Fellow, Prague, Czech Republic.
Mediterranean University of Reggio Calabria, Reggio Calabria, Italy; University of Economics, Prague, Czech Republic.
Soc Sci Med. 2017 Oct;190:38-47. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2017.08.006. Epub 2017 Aug 12.
A well-established political economic literature has shown as multi-level governance affects the inefficiency of public expenditures. Yet, this expectation has not been empirically tested on health expenditures. We provide a political economy interpretation of the variation in the prices of 6 obstetric DRGs using Italy as a case study. Italy offers a unique institutional setting since its 21 regional governments can decide whether to adopt the national DRG system or to adjust/waive it. We investigate whether the composition and characteristics of regional governments do matter for the average DRG level and, if so, why. To address both questions, we first use a panel fixed effects model exploiting the results of 66 elections between 2000 and 2013 (i.e., 294 obs) to estimate the link between DRGs and the composition and characteristics of regional governments. Second, we investigate these results exploiting the implementation of a budget constraint policy through a difference-in-differences framework. The incidence of physicians in the regional government explains the variation of DRGs with low technological intensity, such as normal newborn, but not of those with high technological intensity, as severely premature newborn. We also observe a decrease in the average levels of DRGs after the budget constraint implementation, but the magnitude of this decrease depends primarily on the presence of physicians among politicians and the political alignment between the regional and the national government. To understand which kind of role the relevance of the political components plays (i.e., waste vs. better defined DRGs), we check whether any of the considered political economy variables have a positive impact on the quality of regional obstetric systems finding no effect. These results are a first evidence that a system of standardized prices, such as the DRGs, is not immune to political pressures.
一个成熟的政治经济学文献表明,多层治理会影响公共支出的效率。然而,这一预期尚未在医疗支出方面得到经验验证。我们以意大利为例,从政治经济学的角度解释了 6 个产科疾病诊断相关分组(DRG)价格的变化。意大利提供了一个独特的制度环境,因为其 21 个地区政府可以决定是否采用国家 DRG 系统,或者对其进行调整/豁免。我们研究了地区政府的组成和特征是否对平均 DRG 水平有影响,如果有影响,原因是什么。为了解决这两个问题,我们首先使用面板固定效应模型,利用 2000 年至 2013 年的 66 次选举结果(即 294 个观测值)来估计 DRG 与地区政府组成和特征之间的关系。其次,我们利用预算约束政策的实施,通过双重差分框架来检验这些结果。地区政府中医生的比例可以解释低技术含量的 DRG 的变化,如正常新生儿,但不能解释高技术含量的 DRG 的变化,如极早产儿。我们还观察到,在实施预算约束政策后,DRG 的平均水平下降,但这种下降的幅度主要取决于政客中医生的存在以及地区政府与国家政府之间的政治结盟。为了了解政治因素的相关性发挥了哪种作用(即浪费还是更好地定义 DRG),我们检查了所考虑的政治经济学变量中是否有任何一个对地区产科系统的质量产生积极影响,但没有发现任何影响。这些结果首次表明,标准化价格体系,如 DRG,并非不受政治压力的影响。