Unfortunately, we did just this in health care. When Medicare and Medicaid were introduced in 1965, it seemed reasonable to pay providers on a fee-for-service basis. That’s how most private insurers worked, and there just weren’t that many procedures out there. But over time, a fee-for-service model creates huge incentives to produce expensive new services.
Doctors and hospitals might dispute the suggestion that financial considerations influence patient care. Yet the economic evidence is clear: When Medicare and other health care payers guarantee a fee for every service, patients will receive a lot of services.
A recent paper by economists Jeffrey Clemens and Joshua Gottlieb examined the impact of Medicare fees on service provision and health outcomes. (Note: I have served as an academic adviser to both authors.) Medicare reimbursement rates differ from place to place, so that providers in high-cost markets will receive higher rates than those in cheaper ones. But in 1997, reimbursement maps were redrawn, so that some areas that once received low reimbursements - such as Cape Cod and the Islands - were rezoned and began receiving higher payments.
After looking at the services patients received before and after the price changes, Clemens and Gottlieb estimated that a 2 percent increase in rates led to a 5 percent increase in the amount of care that the typical patient received. Higher reimbursement rates particularly encourage the spread of new technologies, like the purchase of magnetic-resonance imaging machines by non-specialists.
Higher spending and more services would be a good thing if they led to dramatic health benefits. But Clemens and Gottlieb found no link between higher reimbursements and better health outcomes. Their finding joins a long list of papers finding little positive connection between medical spending and health outcomes; indeed, my colleagues Kate Baicker and Amitabh Chandra uncovered a distinctly negative correlation between Medicare spending per patient and health outcomes across states. The more Medicare spent on each patient, the worse the result.