替代补偿安排和合作伙伴的生产效率:来自医疗集团实践的证据

M. Gaynor, M. Pauly
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引用次数: 20

摘要

尽管服务部门在经济中的作用越来越大,合伙企业是该部门的一种普遍的组织形式,但对这些公司的行为和绩效知之甚少。本文试图通过开发和测试替代补偿安排对医疗集团实践中生产效率影响的模型来填补这一空白。所采用的技术是两阶段生产边界估计。这种技术提供了对生产效率的直接估计,并允许代理在能力或对财务激励的反应方面存在差异。在前沿文献中,生产效率被认为是外生给定的。在本文中,它是由内生性决定的,因此在估计生产边界时采用了一种简单的计量经济学技术来修正这种内生性。此外,效率的度量本身可以作为因变量,用于对效率决定因素进行明确的计量经济学分析。总体而言,实证结果与企业内部理论的理论工作一致,该理论预测生产率补偿方案对非联合生产和可观察产出的企业有效。这两个标准在医疗团体实践中得到满足。将测量效率作为内生变量处理是独特的,并且允许对生产效率的决定因素进行一些有趣的见解。我们发现,正如理论所假设的那样,将薪酬与生产率联系起来确实增加了生产的数量和效率。群体成员的数量会降低产出的数量和产出的效率。经验确实会带来更高的生产力和效率。一般来说,医疗集团的效率不低于普通制造公司,但健康维护组织的效率低于平均水平。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Alternative Compensation Arrangements and Productive Efficiency in Partnerships: Evidence from Medical Group Practice
Although the role of the services sector in the economy has grown increasingly large, and partnerships are a prevalent form of organization in this sector, relatively little is known about the behavior and performance of these firms. In this paper an attempt is made to fill that gap by developing and testing a model of the effect of alternative compensation arrangements on productive efficiency in medical group practices. The technique employed is two-stage production frontier estimation. This technique provides direct estimates of productive efficiency and allows for differences across agents in ability or responsiveness to financial incentives. In the frontier literature productive efficiency is assumed to be exogenously given. In this paper it is determined endogenously, thus a simple econometric technique correcting for this endogeneity in estimating the production frontier is employed. In addition, the measures of efficiency themselves can be made dependent variables for explicit econometric analysis of the determinants of efficiency. Overall, the empirical results are consistent with theoretical work on internal theory of the firm, which predicts that productivity compensation schemes will work well for firms with non-joint production and observable output. These two criteria are met by medical group practices. The treatment of measured efficiency as an endogenous variable is unique and allows some interesting insights into the determinants of productive efficiency. We find that relating compensation to productivity does increase the quantity and efficiency of production, as theory has hypothesized. The number of members in a group decreases both the quantity produced and the efficiency with which that output is produced. Experience does lead to greater productivity and efficiency. Medical groups in general are measured as being no less efficient than an average manufacturing firm, but Health Maintenance Organizations are less efficient than average.
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