There are problems in aged care, but more competition isn't the solution
- Written by Ou Yang, Research Fellow, The University of Melbourne
The solution to most problems in most markets is more competition.
Whether it’s the market for hairdressers, for massage therapists or for general practitioners, usually, the more of them there are in any town or suburb, the greater is the range and quality they offer and the lower the price.
It’s part of the thinking behind a range[1] of government legislation designed to increase competition and consumer choice in residential aged care.
Yet in research just published by the Melbourne Institute[2] using the de-identified records of 2,900 nursing homes provided to the aged care royal commission we found no such effect.
No matter how competition was measured, we found no statistically-significant differences in price or quality as indicated by a range of measures including nursing hours worked per resident, assaults per resident, complaints per resident, the use of antipsychotic drugs and avoidable early deaths.
We measured the amount of competition for each nursing home in three ways: by the number of competitors within a 10-kilometre radius, the distance in kilometres to the nearest competitor and a measure of market concentration known as the Herfindahl-Hirschman Index.
Read more: Aged care, death and taxes after the royal commission[3]
We found great variation in competition (much more in cities, much less in regions) along with slight decreases in competition in urban and remote areas (notwithstanding government measures designed to promote it) and minor increases in competition in regional Australia.
But we found no evidence linking competition to measures of quality of care, with the possible exception of registered nurse hours, although this linkage wasn’t present in all measures of competition.
Competition was weakly associated with price if at all.
References
- ^ range (www.health.gov.au)
- ^ Melbourne Institute (melbourneinstitute.unimelb.edu.au)
- ^ Aged care, death and taxes after the royal commission (theconversation.com)
- ^ Extract from report (melbourneinstitute.unimelb.edu.au)
- ^ 4 key takeaways from the aged care royal commission's final report (theconversation.com)
- ^ market forces (www.youtube.com)
- ^ recommended (agedcare.royalcommission.gov.au)
Authors: Ou Yang, Research Fellow, The University of Melbourne