U-Form vs. M-Form: How to Understand Decision Autonomy
Under Healthcare Decentralization?
Comment on “Decentralisation of Health Services in Fiji: A Decision Space Analysis”
For more than three decades healthcare decentralization has been promoted in developing countries as a way of
improving the financing and delivery of public healthcare. Decision autonomy under healthcare decentralization would
determine the role and scope of responsibility of local authorities. Jalal Mohammed, Nicola North, and Toni Ashton
analyze decision autonomy within decentralized services in Fiji. They conclude that the narrow decision space allowed to
local entities might have limited the benefits of decentralization on users and providers. To discuss the costs and benefits
of healthcare decentralization this paper uses the U-form and M-form typology to further illustrate the role of decision
autonomy under healthcare decentralization. This paper argues that when evaluating healthcare decentralization, it is
important to determine whether the benefits from decentralization are greater than its costs. The U-form and M-form
framework is proposed as a useful typology to evaluate different types of institutional arrangements under healthcare
decentralization. Under this model, the more decentralized organizational form (M-form) is superior if the benefits
from flexibility exceed the costs of duplication and the more centralized organizational form (U-form) is superior if the
savings from economies of scale outweigh the costly decision-making process from the center to the regions. Budgetary
and financial autonomy and effective mechanisms to maintain local governments accountable for their spending
behavior are key decision autonomy variables that could sway the cost-benefit analysis of healthcare decentralization