Missouri Hospitals Play Important Economic Role, MU Study Finds
Hospital sector proves to be recession proof, MU economic expert says
October 26th, 2011
COLUMBIA, Mo. –Missouri hospitals provide healthcare and well-being to Missourians and residents of surrounding states. New research from the University of Missouri reinforces that Missouri hospitals also provide key support to the state’s economic structure. Tom Johnson, the Frank Miller Professor of Agricultural and Applied Economics in the College of Agriculture, Food, and Natural Resources and professor in the Truman School of Public Affairs found Missouri hospitals directly account for nearly six percent of the state’s economy and another four to five percent indirectly.
Johnson’s study analyzed patient, expenditure, revenue, and staffing data presented by the Missouri Hospital Association (MHA) for every hospital in the state of Missouri. He found that Missouri hospitals are responsible for creating more than 265,000 jobs in the state and increasing gross state product (GSP) by $18.8 billion. Johnson also found the construction projects from Missouri hospitals’ capital expenses created an additional 21,000 jobs and generated another $1.2 billion increase in GSP.
“The health care and social assistance sector, of which hospitals are a major component, is the fourth largest sector in the Missouri economy,” Johnson, who is the director of the Community Policy Analysis Center (CPAC) at the University of Missouri, said. “This sector accounted for nearly 11 percent of Missouri’s jobs in 2009.”
Johnson’s study revealed that Missouri hospitals bring in much revenue through “medical tourism” which is when non-Missouri residents come to a Missouri hospital for medical treatment. Medical tourism accounted for approximately 850,000 out-of-state patients. Johnson found these patients created an additional 3,000 jobs and $124 million in GSP for Missouri. Johnson says these numbers show how important Missouri hospitals are to the state economy, especially in the current economic climate.
“We found that the hospital sector is virtually recession-proof,” Johnson said. “The state’s hospitals continue to provide employment, income, retail sales and state and local tax revenues while other sectors of the economy have faltered. The overall state economy, unemployment rate and home values would be significantly more depressed if it were not for the strength and stability of the hospital sector.”
Johnson also says that rural areas of the state receive even more positive economic effects from Missouri hospitals due to the nature of the jobs they create.
“The hospital sector is spread across the state to meet the medical needs of the state’s residents,” Johnson said. “Hospitals provide good paying, steady jobs, and are a bigger relative presence in rural areas than most sectors.”
This study was funded by the Missouri Hospital Association.