Public financing of health expenditures, insurance, and health outcomes
- 1 November 2002
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Applied Economics
- Vol. 34 (17) , 2105-2113
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00036840210135665
Abstract
The effects of public financing of health expenditures, insurance coverage and other factors on health outcomes are examined within health production models estimated using 1960–1992 data across 20 OECD countries. Mortality rates are found to depend on the mix of health care expenditures and the type of health insurance coverage. Increases in the publicly financed share of health expenditures are associated with increases in mortality rates. Increases in inpatient and ambulatory insurance coverage are associated with reduced mortality. The effects of GDP, health expenditures and age structure on mortality are similar to those in previous studies. Tobacco use, alcohol use, fat consumption, female labour force participation, and education levels are also significantly related to overall mortality rates. Increases in income inequality are associated with lower mortality rates, suggesting that the negative relationship between inequality and health outcomes suggested by some previous studies does not remain when a more complete model is estimated. The result that increases in public financing increase mortality rates is robust to a number of changes in specifications and samples. Thus, as countries increase the level of their health expenditures, they may want to avoid increasing the proportion of their expenditures that are publicly financed.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Income inequality and population healthSocial Science & Medicine, 1998
- Is health care really a luxury?Journal of Health Economics, 1997
- A New Data Set Measuring Income InequalityThe World Bank Economic Review, 1996
- The determinants and effects of health expenditure in developed countriesJournal of Health Economics, 1992
- An econometric analysis of health care expenditure: A cross-section study of the OECD countriesJournal of Health Economics, 1992
- Conversion factor instability in international comparisons of health care expenditureJournal of Health Economics, 1991
- Health Behavior, Health Knowledge, and SchoolingJournal of Political Economy, 1991
- Schooling, Self-Selection, and HealthThe Journal of Human Resources, 1989
- On the Concept of Health Capital and the Demand for HealthJournal of Political Economy, 1972
- The Production of Health, an Exploratory StudyThe Journal of Human Resources, 1969