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Published in: International Journal for Equity in Health 1/2015

Open Access 01-12-2015 | Commentary

Health care financing and the sustainability of health systems

Authors: Lycourgos Liaropoulos, Ilias Goranitis

Published in: International Journal for Equity in Health | Issue 1/2015

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Abstract

The economic crisis brought an unprecedented attention to the issue of health system sustainability in the developed world. The discussion, however, has been mainly limited to “traditional” issues of cost-effectiveness, quality of care, and, lately, patient involvement. Not enough attention has yet been paid to the issue of who pays and, more importantly, to the sustainability of financing. This fundamental concept in the economics of health policy needs to be reconsidered carefully. In a globalized economy, as the share of labor decreases relative to that of capital, wage income is increasingly insufficient to cover the rising cost of care. At the same time, as the cost of Social Health Insurance through employment contributions rises with medical costs, it imperils the competitiveness of the economy. These reasons explain why spreading health care cost to all factors of production through comprehensive National Health Insurance financed by progressive taxation of income from all sources, instead of employer-employee contributions, protects health system objectives, especially during economic recessions, and ensures health system sustainability.
Footnotes
1
In this paper we treat the concept of Equity-in-Health as implying equal treatment for equal needs, regardless of income or financial ability
 
2
OECD 2nd Meeting of the joint Network on Fiscal Sustainability of Health Systems, Paris, 25–26 March 2013
 
3
A conference was organized in Brussels on May 26–27, 2013, as a multi-stakeholder public debate entitled “From Crisis to Recovery: how to drive sustainable healthcare together?”. The full Report will be submitted to the European Parliament in early 2015.
 
4
OECD 3rd Meeting of the Joint DELSA/GOV Network on Fiscal Sustainability of Health Systems, Paris, 24–25 April 2014.
 
5
Such as the US and Switzerland.
 
6
For example, the British government in 1947 assumed the full burden of the National Health Service as “a reward to the British people after the pain and devastation of the war” [1].
 
7
The importance of the moral determinant is clear in a comparison of post-war UK, with the US, a country with similar cultural background, fifty years later. The Affordable Care Act – (ACA) of President Obama, although presented as a major health reform, is only a mere extension of government financing to meet the health needs of the 15 % of uninsured poor Americans. Even so, it has become the main issue in the ideological and political warfare in the US.
 
8
Medical progress is desirable, but it is also expensive and not predictable.
 
9
2012 is the last year for which official data exist.
 
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Metadata
Title
Health care financing and the sustainability of health systems
Authors
Lycourgos Liaropoulos
Ilias Goranitis
Publication date
01-12-2015
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
International Journal for Equity in Health / Issue 1/2015
Electronic ISSN: 1475-9276
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12939-015-0208-5

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