The changing role of the state in the Dutch healthcare system
Götze, RalfDownload:
pdf-Format: Dokument 1.pdf (867 KB)
URL | http://edoc.vifapol.de/opus/volltexte/2013/4187/ |
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Dokumentart: | Bericht / Forschungsbericht / Abhandlung |
Institut: | SFB 597 Staatlichkeit im Wandel |
Schriftenreihe: | TranState working papers |
Bandnummer: | 141 |
Sprache: | Englisch |
Erstellungsjahr: | 2010 |
Publikationsdatum: | 11.01.2013 |
Originalveröffentlichung: | http://www.sfb597.uni-bremen.de/pages/download.php?ID=182&SPRACHE=DE&TABLE=AP&TYPE=PDF (2010) |
SWD-Schlagwörter: | Staatslehre , Gesundheitswesen , Niederlande |
DDC-Sachgruppe: | Politik |
BK - Basisklassifikation: | 44.10 (Gesundheitswesen: Allgemeines), 89.31 (Staatslehre), 15.63 (Belgien, Niederlande, Luxemburg) |
Sondersammelgebiete: | 3.6 Politik und Friedensforschung |
Kurzfassung auf Englisch:
This paper deals with the changing role of the state in the Dutch healthcare system. At the eve of the first oil crisis the Netherlands had a relatively compound healthcare system combining several characteristics of the three Western healthcare system types: National Health Service, social health insurance system, and private health insurance system. Comparative case-studies on OECD countries indicate a hybridization trend from relatively pure to mixed healthcare systems during the era of ‘permanent austerity’. The adequate question is therefore, how and why the role of the state has changed in the relatively mixed Dutch social health insurance system. In order to approach this research question in a systematic way, we distinguish between three dimensions of the healthcare system: regulation, financing, and service provision. In the regulation dimension we observe an increasing state influence on coverage by an incremental socialization of the private sector. This progress culminated in 2006 in the merger of sickness funds and private health insurances into a functional social health insurance under private law. Since the early 1980s the state also directly intervened in the corporatist bargaining of providers and insurers in order to contain costs and regain global competiveness. At the beginning of the new millennium tight budgets resulting in long waiting lists were no longer accepted against the background of a booming economy. Instead, the role of competition increased through new opportunities and incentives for selective contracting between insurers and providers. Therefore, we observe a shift from corporatist self-regulation towards state-regulated market competition within the institutional framework of a social health insurance system. This ongoing reform process towards a welfare market for medical goods was supported by the main political parties on the left and right in order to enhance efficiency and safeguard solidarity.
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