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Titre Fair funding and competitive governance. The German model of health care organisation under debate
Auteur Bode Ingo
Mir@bel Revue Revue française des Affaires sociales
Numéro no 6, 2006 Reforms and regulation of health care systems in Europe
Rubrique / Thématique
Reforms implemented in several European countries
Page 183-206
Résumé anglais In Germany, health care is provided via the (publicly regulated) interplay of a multitude of non-profit sickness funds and a pluralistic set of providers with which these funds maintain contractual relations. With its Bismarckian tradition, the system relies on pay-as-you-go contributions shared by employers and employees – an institutional design that has recently been challenged, however. Moreover, a particular, and novel, characteristic of the German health care system is competitive governance in its administrative setting (s). This article explores both the evolution of the funding regime and developments in the governance structures of the system. It argues that there have been incremental changes in the former and more radical shifts in the latter. The current debate on health care reform tends to confirm this configuration; in spite of far-reaching proposals to modify medical financing, the old funding regime basically tends to persist while the governance structures show an in-built tendency towards ever more inter-agency competition. The result is a contradictory evolution revealing both institutional stability and path-breaking liberalisation – with an underlying differentiation of medical service provision and further social inequality as a likely outcome.
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