Competitive Neutrality and the Cost and Quality of Welfare Services
Abstract
Competition between private and public firms can increase service quality and reduce public costs in markets for tax-financed welfare services with non-contractible quality. Synergies arise from combining high-powered incentives for quality provision (emanating from private firms) with low rents (public firms). The optimal regulation directs the government to provide public firms with better funding than private competitors, e.g. paying them higher prices or covering their deficits. This additional compensation is not tied to additional verifiable quality obligations. Competitive neutrality regulation makes mixed markets less attractive; especially so when com- petition is lax. Then, the best alternative is pure public ownership.
Other description
JEL: H44; L33; L44
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2017-08Author
Stennek, Johan
Keywords
public-private competition
competitive neutrality
mixed markets
public option
ownership
competition
incomplete contracts
strategic ambiguity
merit goods
SGEI
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
704
Language
eng