The marginal success of regulated competition policy in the Netherlands

Authors
Citation
H. Lieverdink, The marginal success of regulated competition policy in the Netherlands, SOCIAL SC M, 52(8), 2001, pp. 1183-1194
Citations number
62
Categorie Soggetti
Public Health & Health Care Science
Journal title
SOCIAL SCIENCE & MEDICINE
ISSN journal
02779536 → ACNP
Volume
52
Issue
8
Year of publication
2001
Pages
1183 - 1194
Database
ISI
SICI code
0277-9536(200104)52:8<1183:TMSORC>2.0.ZU;2-N
Abstract
In the second half of the 1980s the government in the Netherlands adopted a regulated competition policy as part of a comprehensive programme designed to restructure the health care system. The programme was a product of its social and political context, promoted by a group of political entrepreneur s and created to improve efficiency. Despite the initial political support and a long political debate the government had to acknowledge by 1992 that the restructuring would not take place. But changes fostered limited compet ition between sickness funds and more extensive competition in the small ma rket for supplementary policies. This, however, has not led to sickness funds becoming powerful purchasers t hat forced hospitals and doctors to improve their efficiency. Rather, they compete for subscribers, become part of large insurance conglomerates, and market more supplementary options. Culturally, health care institutions hav e become more entrepreneurial, taken up more business concepts, and made th e language of markets, products and consumer sovereignty more common. The i mpact of these changes on the health care system is still unknown, but they create pressure for more health care services, leaving the government with problems that equal those of the 1980s. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.