Monday, September 20, 2010

A poorly designed Medicare auction

Peter Cramton writes:

Dear Al,

Below is my email to colleagues in market design. The "brief note" below tells the story. If any readers of your blog would like to sign as well, they are welcome to send me an email and I will add them. Washington is in desperate need for good market designers. I hope this helps. Many thanks for your support!

Dear Colleagues,

Click here for a brief comment (via Dropbox) to the House Ways and Means Health Subcommittee on the Medicare Competitive Bidding Program for Durable Medical Equipment. I would be grateful if you would agree to be a signatory of the comment. As you will see the program has some basic and obvious flaws. Indeed, your reward for reading the short comment is seeing a peculiar pricing rule for multi-unit auctions—set the price at the median winning bid, rather than the highest accepted bid. Remarkably CMS (the agency that administers the auction) has been working for over ten years on this auction program. CMS has conducted several auction events in particular regions of the U.S. to test the program. The tests have demonstrated serious problems, but CMS has chosen to hide the problems and make minor and ineffective changes in response (e.g., changing the pricing rule from unweighted average winning bid to unweighted median winning bid).

There is some urgency to this, since the House Subcommittee will have a hearing on this matter the week of September 27, and I have been asked to testify. I would be grateful if you could reply in the next two days (Wednesday, September 22). A simple "yes" or "no" response is all that is required.

Many thanks!

All the best,
Peter

P.S. For those who would like some additional information on the program, you may be interested in the following:

0. A brief note on the current problems and the need for action.

1. The Request for Bids Instructions. The median pricing rule is defined in Section E (bottom of page 4 and top of page 5). "The single payment amount for an item furnished under a competitive bidding program is equal to the median of the bids submitted for that item by suppliers whose composite bids for the product category are equal to or below the pivotal bid for that product category, see 42 CFR §414.416." [Products are assigned to product categories. A composite bid for a category is the demand-weighted average of a bidder's bids on individual products within the category. This is what creates the bid skewing issue.]

2. The Federal Register, which presents the final rule together with a discussion for its rationale. The winner determination and pricing are discussed on pages 18041-18047. The median pricing rule and its rationale appear in pages 18045-18047. On the rationale, I excerpt the most relevant text below:
"We believe that setting the single payment amount based on the median of the contract suppliers' bids satisfies the statutory requirement that single payment amounts are to be based on bids submitted and accepted. This will result in a single payment for an item under a competitive bidding program that is representative of all acceptable bids, not just the highest or the lowest of the winning bids for that item."
"While this was our proposed approach, we solicited comments on other methodologies for setting the single payment amount, including using an adjustment factor as part of the methodology for setting the single payment amount. This was the methodology we used for the competitive bidding demonstrations..." (p. 18045) [A price adjustment was used in the earlier trials of the program, but it is no longer used.]
"Finally, we considered taking the maximum winning bid for each item. However, this approach would have led to program payment amounts that were higher than necessary because some suppliers were willing to provide these items to beneficiaries at a lower cost." (p. 18046)

3. Katzman and McGeary (2008) study the earlier trials and show the bid skewing problem as well as other problems in these trials.

4. Request for Bids Bidding Form, so you can see what a bid looks like.

5. Eligibility Requirements, so you can get a sense of bidder qualification.

6. Quality Standards, so you can see the limited information on quality standards and performance obligations.

Professor Peter Cramton
Economics, Tydings Hall
University of Maryland
College Park MD 20742-7211

pcramton@gmail.com  www.cramton.umd.edu  voice/fax +1 240 396 1043

2 comments:

  1. Nobody likes paying information rents. (Or gaining weight when they eat poorly.)

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  2. I thought about writing Peter to add my name to his petition, but

    1) The letter specifies that the signatories are all specialists in auction design. I'm an assistant professor with a specialization in experimental/behavioral economics, but not in auction theory specifically.

    2) The names are listed alphabetically, so including a lot of other economists' names would distract from the heavyweights. And it would look goofy to put my name at the same level as people like Athey or Roth.

    But if they were to decide to add a list of "additional signatories" or somesuch, below the main signatories, I'd be happy to sign that.

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