Hospitals: The Market for Health Care Facilities

Health care facilities include hospitals and nursing homes. Demand for beds and occupancy depends on income, prices and insurer restrictions. The supply of beds is limited by regulatory certificates of need. The implied equilibrium vacancy leads to a trade‐off with rate increases. Rate increases est...

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Veröffentlicht in:Real estate economics 2007-03, Vol.35 (1), p.113-134
Hauptverfasser: Benjamin, John D., Chinloy, Peter, Megbolugbe, Isaac F.
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Chinloy, Peter
Megbolugbe, Isaac F.
description Health care facilities include hospitals and nursing homes. Demand for beds and occupancy depends on income, prices and insurer restrictions. The supply of beds is limited by regulatory certificates of need. The implied equilibrium vacancy leads to a trade‐off with rate increases. Rate increases establish an asset price for a hospital bed. If prices of health care rise faster than income and nonhealth prices, patients demand less bed availability and occupancy. Rising vacancy and rising prices occur, consistent with the empirical observations for U.S. health care facilities. For 1980–2001, the equilibrium vacancy rate for U.S. hospitals is between 27% and 36% depending on capacity adjustments, bed availability and price expectations. Equilibrium vacancy is near the actual rate after 2000, but that rate is 11 percentage points higher than in the early 1980s when the number of beds was nearly one‐third higher. Usually rent regulation leads to excess demand. But in a general equilibrium model with income, relative prices, expectations, supply and capital markets, price regulation can coexist with excess supply.
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source EBSCOhost Business Source Complete; Wiley Online Library All Journals
subjects Admission and discharge
Business conditions
Certificates of need
Forecasts and trends
Health care industry
Health facilities
Hospitals
Prices and rates
Studies
Supply and demand
title Hospitals: The Market for Health Care Facilities
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