This paper studies the impact of hospital mergers on waiting lists for elective treatments, both theoretically and empirically. We develop a model of hospital competition with regulated prices in a spatial framework, building on Brekke et al. (2008), where patients choose providers based on travel distance and waiting lists, and hospitals maximise a combination of profits and patient utility. We show that mergers internalise two key competition externalities: (i) altruistic competition to attract patients and (ii) incentives to avoid unprofitable patients.
Empirically, we use a 19-year panel (2000–2018) of English NHS hospitals and estimate a multi-period Difference-in-Differences model with staggered treatment timing. We find that mergers involving profit-oriented hospitals (Foundation Trusts) increase waiting lists, whereas mergers involving semi-altruistic hospitals reduce them. These findings are consistent with the theoretical predictions.
From a policy perspective, merger effects are highly heterogeneous and critically depend on hospital objectives.
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