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Production and Cost

2. Production and Cost of Health Care. We want to look at 4 basic aspects.- Substitution between Inputs- Cost Function, and Economies of Scale and Scope- Use of Economies of Scale and Scope in Cost Function Studies- Measurement of Efficiency. 3. Traditional Health Technology Analysis. Altho

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Production and Cost

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    1. 1 Production and Cost

    2. 2 Production and Cost of Health Care We want to look at 4 basic aspects. - Substitution between Inputs - Cost Function, and Economies of Scale and Scope - Use of Economies of Scale and Scope in Cost Function Studies - Measurement of Efficiency

    3. 3 Traditional Health Technology Analysis Although it would seem obvious from economics that we can substitute inputs for each other, it decidedly unclear that the health professions agree. Consider the discussion of need in health care resources. Most important early work that employed a medical determination of health manpower needs was a study by Lee and Jones (1933) -- we reference it some in Chapter 16. We discussed it more in earlier editions. Their method calculated the # of physicians necessary to perform the needed # of medical procedures. The needed # of medical procedures, in turn, was based on the incidence of a morbidity (illness) in the population.

    4. 4 Traditional Health Technology Analysis (2) Consider Condition A, which strikes 1 percent of the population in a given county. Suppose further that its treatment requires 6 hours of physician time, and that there are 250,000 residents in the county. How many physicians are needed, if a physician works 2,000 hours per year.

    5. 5 Traditional Health Technology Analysis (3) a. 250,000 persons x (1 morbidity/100 persons) = 2,500 morbidities. b. 2,500 morbidities x (6 hours/morbidity) = 15,000 hours c. 15,000 hours x (1 physician/2,000 hours) = 7.5 physicians. Suppose that the county currently has 7.5 physicians, and that the county's population is projected to rise from 250,000 to 400,000. Without any adjustment for the morbidity rate, or for the technology of care, the need would be projected to rise to (400,000/250,000) x 7.5, or 12.0 physicians. If the projected (actual) total is less than 12.0 then a projected (actual) shortage is said to exist.

    6. 6 Severe assumptions. Even if we supposed that there are only two factors of production, physicians L and some amount of capital or machinery K, the Lee-Jones approach tends to ignore the possibilities for substitution between inputs. Presumes: a. there is no substitution of other inputs for physician inputs, and, b. there is no projected technological change in the production of health care services.

    7. 7 c. there is a single, unique answer to the question of how many medical procedures are appropriate given the illness data for a population, d. and prices and costs of various inputs are safely ignored. and additionally: e. manpower provided to the public will be demanded by the public or otherwise paid for, f. medical doctors are the appropriate body of people to determine population needs. Severe assumptions.

    8. 8 Elasticity of substitution, ?. ? = the % change in the factor input ratio, brought about by a 1% change in the factor price ratio.

    9. 9 Production Functions Several different types of production functions. The typical Cobb-Douglas production function for capital and labor can be written as: Q = A L? K? It turns out that there is a property of the Cobb-Douglas function that ? = 1. What does this mean? This gives an interesting result that factor shares stay constant. Why? s = wL / rK s = (w/r) (L/K) Increase in (w/r) means that (L/K) should fall. With matching 1% changes, shares stay constant.

    10. 10 Consider C.E.S. production function with capital and labor. Q = A [?K? + (1-?) L?] R/?. If profits are: ? = pQ - rK - wL, when we substitute in for the quantity relationship, we get: Differentiating with respect to L and K, we get: ?? /?L = A(R/?) ?(1-?) L?-1( [?K? + (1-?) L?] R/?-1 - w= 0 ?? /?K = A(R/?) ?? K?-1( [?K? + (1-?) L?] R/?-1 - r= 0 Simplifying, we get: (1-?)/? (K/L)1-? = w/r Production Functions

    11. 11 Production Functions Redefine k = K/L, and ? = w/r, so: [(1-?)/?] (k)1-? = ? Now, differentiate fully. We get: [(1-?)/?] (1-?) (k)-? dk = d?, or: dk/d? = [?/(1-?)] [1/(1-?)] (k)?. Multiplying by ?/k, we get the elasticity of substitution, or: ? = 1/(1-?). What does a Cobb-Douglas function look like? What do others look like?

    12. 12 Cost Functions and Production A Short Primer on Estimating Cost Functions We start with the premise that Q = f (x), where x refers to inputs. Economic theory has moved us to the “cost function” in which we minimize costs subject to a given level of production. C = ? pixi = C (Q, p). where xi are inputs, p are factor costs. It turns out that we can estimate production elasticities of substitution between any two variable inputs i and j, as: ? ij = C Cij / Ci Cj (subscripts refer to partial derivatives)

    13. 13 Two fundamental problems Two fundamental problems. You need measures of factor costs if you want to make it complete. If you’re looking over time, input price effects may account for large portions of the increasing costs. Even with static models, however, you have problems. Not including factor prices implies that they do not matter. This is similar to assuming that the substitution elasticity is zero.

    14. 14 Cost minimization may occur in the short run or in the long run, depending on how variable the factors are. It turns out that hospitals employ VERY FIXED capital. Let K represent fixed inputs. Variable cost function is: Cv = Cv (Q, p?, K) = ? x?i p?i. To be in LR eq’m you must also satisfy C = Cv (Q, p?, K*) = ? x?I p?I + pkK*, and hence: ?Cv / ?K = pk. May or may not hold. Most people tend to net out capital costs and try to estimate short run cost functions with respect to variable inputs. Two fundamental problems

    15. 15 Geometrically Let K be the fixed level of capital. Inputs X, output Y. SR Cost will be higher than LR costs everywhere except at K. Only at K* will marginal product ratio equal the factor price ratio.

    16. 16 Jensen and Morrissey (1986) They try to estimate a production function for hospital care. From this production function, they trace isoquants, and calculate substitution elasticities. They have a number of labor inputs, as well as “beds” a measure of capital inputs. They look at a hospital producing output Q, adjusted for case-mix, using admitting physicians L and non-physician labor and capital K. L is a fraction of S, size of the medical staff, so:

    17. 17 Output is a function of capital and labor services: Q = Q (K, L) (1) Labor is a function of the fraction of the staff that is physicians. L = ? (K, N) S (2) where N is a set of market area conditions such as the availability and attractiveness of competing hospitals in the area. Jensen and Morrissey (1986)

    18. 18 Substituting (2) into (1) ? Q = Q (K, S, N). They estimate a translog production function for annual cases treated Q: ln Q = ?0 + ? ?i ln Xi + ? ?i ln Xi2 + ? ? ?ij ln Xi ln Xj. This leads to: MPi = ?i (Q/Xi), where ?i = ?i + 2?i (ln Xi) + ? ?ij (ln Xj).= output elasticity Jensen and Morrissey (1986)

    19. 19 From the translog, we can develop ?ij as: ?ij = (?i + ?j)/(?i + ?j + 2?ij - 2?i?j /?i -2?j?i/?j). where ?i is an output elasticity. For a cost minimizing firm, ?ij is the percentage change in the input ratio of Xi and Xj per 1% change in the ratio of input prices. If ?ij > 0, i and j are substitutes in production. If ?ij < 0, i and j are complements in production. Jensen and Morrissey (1986)

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    22. 22 Substitution Elasticities Substitution Elasticities Among the substitution elasticities, we have: - Between medical staff relative to nurses = 0.547 SOME - Between nurses and residents = 2.127; CONSIDERABLE - Even between labor and capital = .124 - .211 A LITTLE BIT

    23. 23 Measuring Efficiency If we’re right on an isoquant, then we must be efficient. If we’re not, then we must be inefficient. How hard could that be?

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    25. 25 Frontier Methods Efficient is efficient We want to identify the difference between “bad luck” and inefficiency. qi = f(Xi) ui vi, (6') vi = random shock, and ui = multiplicative efficiency term. ui = qi/f(Xi)vi ui ? [0, 1]. If: qi = ? Xji bj + ej, then: ei = ui + vi, where ui are one-sided, non-negative, and vi ~ N (0, ?2v).

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    27. 27 How easy is this to do? Newhouse (1994) says “not easy.” Argues there are problems with: unmeasured inputs case-mix controls omitted or improper inputs All of these could look like inefficiency, when they are not.

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