Who Benefits from Government Health Spending and Why? A Global Assessment
This paper uses a common household survey instrument and a common set of imputation assumptions to estimate the pro-poorness of government health expenditure across 69 countries at all levels of income. On average, government health expenditure eme...
Main Authors: | , , , |
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Format: | Policy Research Working Paper |
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
World Bank Group, Washington, DC
2014
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2014/09/20229062/benefits-government-health-spending-global-assessment http://hdl.handle.net/10986/20376 |
Summary: | This paper uses a common household
survey instrument and a common set of imputation assumptions
to estimate the pro-poorness of government health
expenditure across 69 countries at all levels of income. On
average, government health expenditure emerges as
significantly pro-rich, but there is heterogeneity across
countries: in the majority, government health expenditure is
neither pro-rich nor pro-poor, while in a small minority it
is pro-rich, and in an even smaller minority it is pro-poor.
Government health expenditure on contracted private
facilities emerges as significantly pro-rich for all types
of care, and in almost all Asian countries government health
expenditure overall is significantly pro-rich. The
pro-poorness of government health expenditure at the country
level is significantly and positively correlated with gross
domestic product per capita and government health
expenditure per capita, significantly and negatively
correlated with the share of government facility revenues
coming from user fees, and significantly and positively
correlated with six measures of the quality of a
country's governance; it is not, however, correlated
with the size of the private sector nor with the degree to
which the private sector delivers care disproportionately to
the better-off. Because poorly-governed countries are
underrepresented in the sample, government health
expenditure is likely to be even more pro-rich in the world
as a whole than it is in the countries in this study. |
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