This paper aims at assessing the impact
of fiscal discipline towards sub-national governments on citizens’
well-being. We model fiscal discipline by considering the expectations
of deficit bailouts by Central Government, and focus on a particular
dimension of well-being, namely health outcomes at the regional level.
We study then how bailout expectations affect the expenditure for
health care policies carried out by Regional Governments: in the
presence of opportunistic behaviours by local governments – induced by
soft budget constraints – bailout expectations should affect only
spending inefficiency, and should not have any real effects on
citizens’ health.
To investigate this issue, we model the efficient use of public
resources for health care delivery as an input requirement frontier,
and assess the effects of bailout expectations on both the structural
component of health spending and its deviations from the best practice.
The evidence from a sample of 15 Italian Regions observed from 1993 to
2006 highlights that bailout expectations do not significantly
influence the position of the frontier, thus do not affect citizens’
health.
However, they appear to exert a remarkable impact on excess spending.