Book contents
- The Dragon, the Eagle, and the Private Sector
- The Dragon, the Eagle, and the Private Sector
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- Part I The Framework
- Part II Policy Realms
- 3 Building the Railroads That Build the Nation
- 4 Real Estate’s Intricate Tangle of Public and Private
- 5 A Game like No Other
- 6 The Truest Wealth of Nations
- 7 Show Me Where It Hurts
- Part III The Path Forward
- Index
7 - Show Me Where It Hurts
State and Market in Health Care
from Part II - Policy Realms
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2021
- The Dragon, the Eagle, and the Private Sector
- The Dragon, the Eagle, and the Private Sector
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- Part I The Framework
- Part II Policy Realms
- 3 Building the Railroads That Build the Nation
- 4 Real Estate’s Intricate Tangle of Public and Private
- 5 A Game like No Other
- 6 The Truest Wealth of Nations
- 7 Show Me Where It Hurts
- Part III The Path Forward
- Index
Summary
Few, if any, areas of endeavor show a more complicated, and more consequential, tangle of publicness and privateness than health care. It is a prominent, but for the most part, poorly performing arena of public–private interaction in the United States. The governance of this vital sector of the economy – more than one-sixth of GDP – is collaborative; public funds pay for roughly half of medical services (with most of the private spending subsidized through tax preferences), while the vast majority of providers are private. America’s public leaders often fail to recognize the dynamic of shared discretion at the heart of the health-care system, and this failure contributes to the private sector delivering care that is less effective, affordable, and accessible than it should be.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Dragon, the Eagle, and the Private SectorPublic-Private Collaboration in China and the United States, pp. 162 - 198Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021