Amazon’s acquisition of One Medical is the latest example of a large retailer moving into the role of a health care provider. Coming after CVS’ announcement last year that it would be providing health care and Amazon’s previous move to provide in-person health care services through Amazon Care, the company’s latest move has raised even more alarms about corporate expansion and consolidation in a health care industry that for many in the United States remains prohibitively costly.
Amazon’s acquisition of One Medical has raised even more alarms about consolidation in a health care industry that for many Americans remains prohibitively costly.
At the same time, there has been an increasing number of hospital consolidations, including an accelerating number of “mega-mergers” among hospital systems. Despite its theoretical efficiencies, evidence shows that such consolidation leads to rising prices for consumers and that higher prices are not necessarily associated with better care. Hospital executives sometimes argue that consolidation can create one-stop shops that allow for more advanced care, which ignores the reality that many rural residents lose access to care altogether.
Our economy is driven by pro-corporation policies that promise better outcomes, but these policies may actually diminish well-being and hold back equitable economic growth, as the things we need for daily life become less accessible or even of lower quality. Such policies might also help explain why the U.S. still has some of the worst health care outcomes across advanced economies.
The shifting economic backdrop of the health care sector raises fundamental questions: What is good care? How do we provide it? And should care be a marketized and profit-driven industry? The field of feminist economics long ago provided a lens to help us understand that care services in particular are not well-served by market-based economics, and it is long past time that policymakers recognize that good care and a market-based approach are actually at odds.
Health care and other forms of caring labor are critical for our physical and emotional well-being, but it’s hard to marketize care work because of the nature of the labor itself and because the benefits of that labor are often reaped over the long term and provided through complex teams. At the same time, those who have the greatest need for such labor, such as the elderly and young children, are often the least able to pay for it.
This is why we need to treat care work as a public good, meaning a good or service that functions best when made readily available to all members of society and where there is not competition among consumers to receive or use it. A classic example is roads. We all use them, and they are best maintained through public upkeep. Critically, the public provision of public goods is sensible because they have positive externalities, meaning they generate economic activity and growth. Roads help us all get to work and go shopping, boosting economic activity.









