Munich: Center for Economic Studies and ifo Institute (CESifo)
Abstract
We study the competitive effects of restricting direct access to secondary care by gatekeeping,
focusing on the informational role of general practitioners (GPs). In the secondary care
market there are two hospitals choosing quality and specialisation. Patients, who are ex ante
uninformed, can consult a GP to receive an (imperfect) diagnosis and obtain information
about the secondary care market. We show that hospital competition is amplified by higher
GP attendance but dampened by improved diagnosing accuracy. Therefore, compulsory
gatekeeping may result in excessive quality competition and too much specialisation, unless
the mismatch costs and the diagnosing accuracy are sufficiently high. Second-best price
regulation makes direct regulation of GP consultation redundant, but will generally not
implement first-best