Altruism and Innovation in Health Care
Date
2010-08
Authors
Jena, Anupam B.
Mechoulan, Stephane
Philipson, Tomas J.
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Publisher
UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
Abstract
The joint presence of technological change and consumption externalities is central to health care industries around the world, because medical innovation drives the expansion of the health care sector and altruism seems to motivate many public subsidies. Although traditional economic analysis has proposed well-known remedies to deal with consumption externalities and inefficient technological change in isolation, it lacks clear principles for addressing them jointly. We argue that standard remedies to each of the two problems are inadequate. Focusing on U. S. health care, we provide illustrative calculations of the dynamic inefficiency in the level of research and development (R&D) spending when innovators are unable to appropriate the altruistic surplus of non-consumers. We calibrate that altruistic gains amount to about a quarter of consumer surplus in the baseline scenario and that R&D spending may be underprovided by as much as 60 percent.
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Citation
Jena, Anupam B., Stephane Mechoulan, and Tomas J. Philipson. 2010. "Altruism and Innovation in Health Care." Journal of Law & Economics 53(3): 497-518. © 2010 by Journal of Law & Economics..