Obama is considering a “public option” in healthcare reform.  The idea is that everyone will have the right to sign up with a public non-profit entrant in the health insurance market.  This is meant into create more competition in the marketplace and drive down premiums for private health plans.  The case for the public option is more subtle than I initially thought.

Here is my argument:

(1) Suppose there is free entry into the healthcare market.  Then prices are close to marginal cost for private healthcare organizations so the public option only increases welfare if it has a lower cost.  This means in this case the public option has to be more cost effective than the private firms to make the case for entry.  There is some lively debate about whether this is actually the case!

But one might say there are entry barriers as a new firm would have to set up a network of doctors, hospitals etc which will be costly and hence prohibit entry.  So:

(2) Suppose there are entry barriers and existing firms are playing an oligopolistic equilibrium.  This equilibrium might even include implicit collusion at prices well above cost.  Even if firms make profits, there will have to ensure that a new entrant cannot enter and make profits. There are two subcases

(a)  The costs of the potential entrant put an upper bound on profits that can be made by the incumbents.  Then, the public option has to have lower costs than the potential entrant for it to make sense.  This cost is higher than that of incumbents but still has to be lower than potential entrants – so there is still has to be some efficiency advantage to the public option.

(b) The costs of the potential entrant do not put an upper bound on the prices charged by incumbents.  This is because incumbents are deterring entry by the threat of a price war should entry occur.  So quite efficient potential entrants are staying out – they could make profits if entry leads to a non-price-war equilibrium but not otherwise.  In this case, the public option can be more inefficient even than the potential entrant, price at its costs and act as an upper bound on the prices that can be charged by incumbents.

Is there any evidence we are in case 2b rather than 2a?  Also, the public option effectively acts as a price ceiling on incumbents.  A price ceiling can be implemented without the public option.  Not sure which intervention is more politically feasible.