Research Catalog

The Challenge of Financing Health Care in the Current Crisis An Analysis Based on the OECD Data

Title
The Challenge of Financing Health Care in the Current Crisis [electronic resource]: An Analysis Based on the OECD Data / Peter Scherer and Marion Devaux
Author
Scherer, Peter.
Publication
Paris : OECD Publishing, 2010.

Available Online

Full text online available onsite at NYPL

Details

Additional Authors
Devaux, Marion.
Description
52 p.; 21 x 29.7cm.
Summary
The ratio of health expenditure to GDP, which in macroeconomic terms is an indicator which summarises the financing needs of a national health system, is likely to rise in countries for which the GDP falls. Over the past four decades, health expenditure has risen in most countries at a faster rate than GDP, leading to a rise in the expenditure ratio. Fluctuations in this ratio can come about through fluctuations in either of its components. In some cases, notably the USA, GDP variation is the main origin of changes in the ratio, but in the majority of countries health expenditure variation is more important. The experience of countries which did reduce health expenditure after previous recessions suggests that such reductions are short-lived, and demand for health services results over time in a revival of health expenditure growth.
Series Statement
OECD Health Working Papers, 1815-2015 ; no.49
Uniform Title
OECD Health Working Papers, no.49.
Subject
Social Issues/Migration/Health
LCCN
10.1787/5kmfkgr0nb20-en
OCLC
oecd-lib
Author
Scherer, Peter.
Title
The Challenge of Financing Health Care in the Current Crisis [electronic resource]: An Analysis Based on the OECD Data / Peter Scherer and Marion Devaux
Imprint
Paris : OECD Publishing, 2010.
Series
OECD Health Working Papers, 1815-2015 ; no.49
OECD Health Working Papers, 1815-2015 ; no.49.
Connect to:
Full text online available onsite at NYPL
Indexed Term
Social Issues/Migration/Health
Added Author
Devaux, Marion.
Other Standard Identifier
10.1787/5kmfkgr0nb20-en doi
View in Legacy Catalog