Ferguson B, Keen J
Centre for Health Economics, University of York, UK.
Health Econ. 1996 Jan-Feb;5(1):25-36. doi: 10.1002/(SICI)1099-1050(199601)5:1<25::AID-HEC181>3.0.CO;2-F.
This paper discusses some of the economic issues which underpin the rationale for investment in information and communications technologies (ICTs). Information imperfections lead to significant transaction costs (search, negotiating and monitoring) which in turn confer a negative externality on parties involved in exchange. This divergence in private and social costs leads to a degree of resource misallocation (efficiency loss) which, uncorrected, results in a sub-optimal outcome. Traditional solutions to this problem are to rely upon direct government action to reduce the costs of transacting between market agents, or to employ tax/subsidy measures and other legislative action to achieve the desired market outcome. Three key policy questions are raised in the context of the NHS purchaser/provider relationship. Firstly, what is the optimum level of transaction costs; secondly, can ICTs assist in lowering the level of transaction costs to the optimum level; thirdly, who should bear the investment cost in reducing the level of transaction costs? The issue of property rights in different information systems is discussed and raises interesting policy questions about how much investment should be undertaken centrally rather than devolved to a more local level. In some ways this economic framework offers a post hoc justification of why different ICT systems have been introduced at various levels of the NHS. Essentially this reduces to the problem of externalities: providing good information confers a positive externality: not providing relevant, timely and accurate information confers a negative externality, by increasing further the level of transaction costs. The crucial role which ICT systems can play lies in attempting to reduce the level of transaction costs and driving the market towards what Dahlman has described as the transaction-cost-constrained equilibrium.
本文讨论了一些支撑投资信息通信技术(ICTs)基本原理的经济问题。信息不完善会导致巨大的交易成本(搜索、谈判和监督成本),进而给参与交易的各方带来负外部性。这种私人成本与社会成本的差异会导致一定程度的资源配置不当(效率损失),若不加以纠正,会导致次优结果。解决这一问题的传统方法是依靠政府直接行动来降低市场主体之间的交易成本,或采用税收/补贴措施及其他立法行动来实现理想的市场结果。在国民医疗服务体系(NHS)购买者/提供者关系的背景下,提出了三个关键政策问题。首先,交易成本的最佳水平是多少;其次,信息通信技术能否帮助将交易成本降低到最佳水平;第三,谁应该承担降低交易成本水平的投资成本?文中讨论了不同信息系统中的产权问题,并提出了一些有趣的政策问题,比如应该由中央进行多少投资,而不是下放到地方层面。从某些方面来看,这个经济框架为国民医疗服务体系不同层面引入不同信息通信技术系统提供了事后的合理性解释。本质上,这归结为外部性问题:提供良好信息会带来正外部性;不提供相关、及时和准确的信息会带来负外部性,因为这会进一步提高交易成本水平。信息通信技术系统所能发挥的关键作用在于试图降低交易成本水平,并推动市场朝着达尔曼所描述的交易成本约束均衡发展。