'No Place to Be Sick': Cooptation and Convergence in the US Hospital Care Sector

'No Place to Be Sick': Cooptation and Convergence in the US Hospital Care Sector
Mouré, Christopher and Gorsky, Shai. (2025). Working Papers on Capital as Power. No. 2025/02. July. pp. 1-21. (Article - Working Paper; English).

Full Text Available As:
[thumbnail of 20250700_moure_gorsky_no_place_to_be_sick_front.jpg]
Preview
Cover Image
20250700_moure_gorsky_no_place_to_be_sick_front.jpg

Download (67kB) | Preview
[thumbnail of Full Text]
Preview
PDF (Full Text)
20250700_moure_gorsky_no_place_to_be_sick.pdf

Download (545kB) | Preview
[thumbnail of Full Text] HTML (Full Text)
20250700_moure_gorsky_no_place_to_be_sick_text.htm

Download (5MB)

Alternative Locations

https://capitalaspower.com/2025/07/moure-gorsky-no-place-to-be-sick-cooptation-and-convergence-in-the-us-hospital-care-sector/

Abstract or Brief Description

This paper tries to answer the question: in what ways does the logic of capital accumulation shape the organization of hospital care in the US – a sector characterized by a preponderance of both public and private ‘not-for-profit’ institutions? Rather than taking different hospital ownership types as our analytical starting point, to answer this question, we approach the dynamics of the sector as a struggle between ‘capitalized care’ and organized resistance to it. Taking inspiration from the capital as power political economic approach, we define ‘capitalized care’ as a system of health care in which care is subordinated to the ongoing accumulation of power and profit. We map our investigation of organized power onto four empirical dimensions, focusing on the years 2011-2021: organized resistance to capitalized care; distribution of hospitals by ownership type; relative size and concentration of hospital systems; and relative inflation of price markups. We find that these dimensions are closely connected, suggesting that the hospital sector at large is deeply caught up in the logic of capital accumulation. While marginal, organized resistance to capitalized care continues to shape the other dimensions of the hospital landscape – namely, the balance of power between for-profit (FP) and not-for-profit (NFP) hospital systems, the profitability and concentration of large hospital systems, price inflation and medical debt. Not just FP hospitals, but also public and NFP hospitals have become tightly integrated into an overall logic of capitalist accumulation within the sector, leading to increasing consolidation, price inflation, health care inequality, and paradoxically, a large and growing public cost of healthcare.

Language

English

Publication Type

Article - Working Paper

Keywords

capita as power concentration health hospitals inequality inflation markup profit United States

Subject

BN Methodology
BN Policy
BN Region - North America
BN Resistance
BN Science & Technology
BN State & Government
BN Business Enterprise
BN Capital & Accumulation
BN Comparative
BN Conflict & Violence
BN Cooperation & Collective Action
BN Distribution
BN Industrial Organization
BN Institutions

Depositing User

Jonathan Nitzan

Date Deposited

25 Jul 2025 18:41

Last Modified

25 Jul 2025 18:58

URL:

https://bnarchives.net/id/eprint/864

Actions (login required)

View Item View Item