Must-read: William Nordhaus: “Schumpeterian Profits in the American Economy: Theory and Measurement”

William Nordhaus (2004): Schumpeterian Profits in the American Economy: Theory and Measurement: “Schumpeterian profits… arise when firms…

…appropriate the returns from innovative activity… We conclude that only a minuscule fraction of the social returns from technological advances over the 1948-2001 period was captured by producers, indicating that most of the benefits of technological change are passed on to consumers rather than captured by producers.

Must-Read: Nicholas Bagley, Amitabh Chandra, and Austin Frakt: Correcting Signals for Innovation in Health Care

Nicholas Bagley, Amitabh Chandra, and Austin Frakt: Correcting Signals for Innovation in Health Care: “A combination of legal rules and institutional forces pushes health plans to cover nearly every medical innovation…

…The result is that many Americans are effectively forced to over-insure themselves for coverage of some therapies they do not much value. At the same time, others might be willing to spend even more on health plans that would cover therapies that are not considered medically necessary or that have not yet been developed. Technology developers thus receive distorted signals about the size of the market for new innovations, leading them to develop medical treatments that are not in line with what Americans would demand in a wellfunctioning market….

The most prominent policy ideas for reining in spending growth concentrate on slowing the rate of technology diffusion. In so doing, they fail to fully grapple with the mix and pace of technology innovation…. Addressing the incentives for technology development, and not just its diffusion once invented, is critical. We therefore advance a handful of policy proposals to adjust the innovation signal…. (1) Replacing the tax exclusion for employer-provided health insurance with a tax credit, (2) strengthening Medicare’s coverage determination process, and (3) experimenting with reference pricing for certain therapies…. Alternative approaches to tackling the one-size-fits-all nature of insurance–in particular, allowing health plans to compete on the scope of what technologies they cover–would require regulations that are unlikely ever to be politically and culturally attractive.