Odd Rune Straume, Luigi Siciliani, Kurt R. Brekke
Can Competition Reduce Quality?
- article PDF
- available
- 10.1628/093245617X15010500333985
Summary
Authors/Editors
Reviews
Summary
We analyze the effect of competition on quality provision in spatial markets where providers compete in both price and quality (e.g., health care, long-term care, child care, education). By making two key assumptions about the providersin such markets, namely that they are (partly) motivated and have decreasing marginal utility of income, we find, contrary to the existing literature, an unambiguously negative relationship between competition intensity and quality provision. This relationship holds regardless of whether quality and price decisions are made simultaneously or sequentially. However, even if competition reduces quality, it does not necessarily follow that social welfare is reduced.