HomeBusinessThe crackdown on private equity in healthcare is flopping in statehouses

The crackdown on private equity in healthcare is flopping in statehouses

(Bloomberg) — A string of health care bankruptcies has sparked a wave of public anger among financial dealmakers in the industry, prompting lawmakers in statehouses across the country to draft tough new restrictions.

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The so-called crackdown is pointless.

California Governor Gavin Newsom vetoed legislation that would have allowed the state to block private equity deals for most health care facilities. Efforts to strengthen oversight of financial companies or completely ban certain health care investments also failed in Pennsylvania, Connecticut, Oregon, Washington and Minnesota.

In Massachusetts, political condemnation of private equity and real estate firms reached a fever pitch after a bankruptcy filing in May by Steward Health Care, one of the state’s largest hospital operators. A bill that would have increased scrutiny of such investors remains in legislative limbo with just days to go before the end of the session.

The failure of these efforts, including in Democratic-dominated states, all but neutralizes the short-term risk of stricter regulations on health care financial dealmakers.

With federal action already a long way off, future debate is likely to focus on a less radical search for ways to rein in potentially risky practices, including expanded disclosure requirements that could at least give lawmakers more warning when companies are in trouble to sit. Other states, including Indiana, have enacted laws that require special notice of certain health care transactions but do not grant outright blocking powers.

“I don’t think eliminating private equity completely is practical or feasible,” Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healey said in an interview. “I think there is a role for private equity in healthcare – but the question becomes: what is that role? How do you define that role? I think the legislature is right to look at the guardrails we need here.”

Assigning blame

Critics of the Massachusetts and California bills — which advanced the furthest among state legislative efforts — say they wrongly blamed private equity and real estate companies for bigger health care problems.

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“American businesses, in healthcare and other economic sectors, need more investment from all sources. Private equity and private credit can provide the necessary capital,” Drew Maloney, CEO of private equity lobbyist American Investment Council, wrote in a September letter to federal lawmakers.

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