Resilient managed competition during pandemics: Lessons from the Italian experience

Publication date

2022-03-30T10:20:59Z

2022-03-30T10:20:59Z

2022-04

2022-03-30T10:21:00Z

Abstract

One of the main governance decisions that policymakers need to make is whether to implement public services via centralised or decentralised forms. As Costa et al. discuss in their manuscript, when public services are implemented via competing systems, service providers contend to provide good services with the ultimate objective of gaining market quota. This is known as managed competition (MC), as the authorities will have to manage the panoply of public and private organizations offering the service. The alternative is to manage the service more centrally, in what it is identified as vertical integration. As the authors describe, several governments around the globe have abandoned their vertical integrated models in favour of decentralized models. This is the case, as the authors recall, for most health services in Europe. While there is an emerging body of evidence suggesting that decentralized MC outperforms vertically integrated models both in terms of efficiency and in terms of service quality, little is known on how these systems react under different circumstances. This means, for example, how these systems can cope with a sudden increase in their service demands.

Document Type

Article


Accepted version

Language

English

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1017/S1744133120000365

Health Economics Policy And Law, 2022, vol. 17, num. 2, p. 220-223

https://doi.org/10.1017/S1744133120000365

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(c) Cambridge University Press, 2022

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es/

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