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Policy induced increases in private healthcare financing provide short-term relief of total healthcare expenditure growth: Evidence from OECD countries
Institution:1. Department of Economics and Business Economics, Aarhus University, Denmark;2. PeRCent, CESifo, CEPR, IZA;1. University of Magdeburg, Halle Institute for Economic Research, Germany;2. Halle Institute for Economic Research (IWH), Germany;3. University of Halle-Wittenberg, Halle Institute for Economic Research, Germany;1. University of Groningen, Faculty of Economics and Business, Department of Global Economics and Management, Nettelbosje 2, 9747 AE Groningen, the Netherlands;2. CESifo, Germany;3. Osnabrueck University, Institute of Empirical Economic Research, Rolandstr. 8, 49069 Osnabrueck, Germany;1. School of Public Policy, George Mason University, 3351 N. Fairfax Drive, Arlington, VA 22201, USA;2. Department of Economics, Copenhagen Business School, Porcelaenshaven 16A, DK-2000 Frederiksberg, Denmark;3. Economics and Monetary Policy, Central Bank of Iceland, Kalkofnsvegur 1, 150 Reykjavik, Iceland
Abstract:Healthcare reforms have long been advocated as a cure to the increasing healthcare expenditures in advanced economies. Nevertheless, it has not been established whether a market solution via private financing, rather than public financing, curb aggregate healthcare expenditures. To our knowledge, this paper is the first that quantifies the impact of reforms that significantly increases (decreases) the private (public) share of healthcare financing on total healthcare expenditures relative to income in 20 OECD countries. Our reform measure is based on structural break testing of the private share of total expenditures, and verification using evidence of policy reforms. To quantify the effect of these reforms we apply Propensity Score Matching and Inverse Probability Weighted regression analysis. Over a 5-year evaluation period the reforms lead to an accumulated cost saving 0.45 percentage points of GDP. The yearly effects of the reforms are largest in the first years in the post-reform period and decreases in size as a function of time since the reform. Our findings suggest that the investigated healthcare reforms have a relatively short-lived effect on aggregate health spending relative to GDP. The findings are robust to various sensitivity tests.
Keywords:Health care reform  Health care financing  Health expenditures  OECD countries  H51  I13  I18
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