Publication

Hospital Consolidation Across Geographic Markets:
Insights from Market Participants on Mechanisms for Price Increases
April 2025
Methods: In this qualitative study, we interview market participants to elucidate the experience of employers, insurers, and others when negotiating with large health systems.
Findings: The respondents report employer demand for broad, stable provider networks and a lack of support from employers for insurers when negotiating with large health systems undermined insurers’ ability to negotiate lower prices. Additionally, the interviews identified the widespread use of restrictive contract terms by health systems and misaligned financial incentives between employers and consultants engaged to act on their behalf.
Conclusions: Without government action, employers will be unable to restrain price increases that result from increasing market power of consolidated health systems. We identify policy levers that regulators can use to increase competition, but the oligopolistic nature of many health care markets in the U.S. suggest that even more significant government action may be needed.
Source Sightings
Hospital Consolidation Across Geographic Markets
The Corporate Practice of Medicine: Time for a Reevaluation?
Rate Regulatory Handbook: A Guide for State Implementation of Cost Constraint Models
U.S. State-Based Hospital Rate Setting: What Worked, What Didn’t, and What We Need to Do Now
As Hospitals Grow, So Does Your Bill

New evidence on the impacts of cross-market hospital mergers on commercial prices and measures of quality