It is even worse than that. Lets say you want to open a medical facility that will lower costs. This will end up taking away business from other facilities where patients don't find the higher costs to provide value. In a free market, the new facility goes up, existing facilities have to compete, and consumers benefit.
In 35 states you can't do that. Existing facilities are protected, and you'll need to establish a certificate of need[1] showing that business won't be taken away from existing facilities. The somewhat tortured logic is that they would then have to charge remaining patients more which would raise costs for everyone so this is a cost saving measure.
Like many parts of US business it is good old fashioned protectionism, and not free markets.
In 35 states you can't do that. Existing facilities are protected, and you'll need to establish a certificate of need[1] showing that business won't be taken away from existing facilities. The somewhat tortured logic is that they would then have to charge remaining patients more which would raise costs for everyone so this is a cost saving measure.
Like many parts of US business it is good old fashioned protectionism, and not free markets.
[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Certificate_of_need