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Economics and Health: a taster

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Title: Economics and Health: a taster


1
Economics and Health a taster
  • Masters in Public Health
  • Key reference
  • McPake B., Kumaranayake, L. Normand, C (2002)
    Health Economics an international perspective
    London Routledge

2
Discussion Questions
  • Health is a fundamental human right so all health
    needs should be met irrespective of cost.
  • People should be free to smoke, drink alcohol,
    eat what they like, participate in dangerous
    sports etc. because its their choices and their
    lives.
  • A persons age should not be a factor in
    determining whether he/she receives heart
    surgery.
  • A health care organisation has enough resources
    to give a 5 year-old child a potentially
    life-saving operation or to provide a 75 year-old
    woman with a much-needed hip replacement. How
    would you decide which to treat? What further
    information might you need?

3
Lecture outline
  • What is economics?
  • Key concepts and definitions
  • Positive and normative economics
  • Are tobacco taxes good for your health?
  • External costs and benefits public goods
  • Economic evaulation

4
What is economics?
  • Economics concerns the allocation of scarce
    resources among competing demands
  • If resources are insufficient to meet all
    demands, they are scarce
  • hence
  • all resource uses have an opportunity cost
  • health and health care demands appear to be
    infinite
  • resources available for health care are finite

5
Key concepts and definitions (1)
  • opportunity cost the value of the next best
    alternative use of resources
  • resources labour, land, water, raw materials,
    production equipment
  • demand how much of a good/service an individual
    is prepared to buy given prices and income
  • aggregate demand the sum of individual demands

6
Key concepts and definitions (2)
  • efficient production maximise output for given
    inputs
  • efficient consumption maximise economic
    well-being (utility) given prices and income
  • efficient allocation of resources no-ones
    utility can be increased without decreasing
    someone elses
  • many different efficient allocation of resources
    are possible, each resulting in a different
    distribution of individual utilities
  • resource allocation can be by the market or
    planned

7
Positive and normative economics
  • Positive economics describes and explains how
    choices are made
  • Normative economics is concerned with judging
    which choices should be made given certain
    objectives
  • Fairness or equity are difficult concepts but a
    more equitable distribution of health (or health
    care) is often a policy objective
  • A policy which increases total health may
    increase health inequalities there is a
    trade-off between equity and efficiency

8
The effects of tobacco taxes
  • Would raising tobacco taxes
  • reduce smoking?
  • reduce expenditure on tobacco?
  • affect poor and rich equally?

9
Price-elasticity of demand
  • A rise in price tends to reduce consumption
  • Price-elasticity of demand
  • change in quantity
  • ___________________
  • change in price

10
  • cigarette prices rise 10
  • cigarette consumption falls 5
  • what is the price elasticity of demand for
    cigarettes?
  • -5/10 -0.5
  • effect of the price rise is that people smoke
    less but spend more on tobacco so will have less
    to spend on healthy activities
  • and the poor tend to smoke more/spend more on
    tobacco than the rich

11
Externalities and public goods
  • Many health interventions and health-related
    consumption have external costs and/or benefits
    to those not receiving the treatment or engaging
    in the behaviour
  • vaccination reduces the chance of the
    unvaccinated being infected
  • smoking affects nearby non smokers
  • The benefit of eliminating infectious diseases
    is a public good.
  • the benefit I get from it does not reduce anyone
    elses
  • cant exclude those who didnt pay for it from
    enjoying the benefits

12
Externalities a reason for state intervention
  • external (social) costs/benefits not reflected
    in market prices (which result from consumers/
    producers maximising their individual
    utilities/profits)
  • to deal with externalities, government can
  • tax/subsidise
  • regulate/legislate

13
Equity considerations
  • state provision of health care can be justified
    on efficiency grounds
  • equity could be achieved by income redistribution
    i.e. ensuring all have enough money to buy the
    health care they need
  • but
  • externalities and other forms of market failure
    (e.g. imperfect information) are efficiency
    arguments for state involvement in health care

14
Why conduct economic evaluation?
  • To make the best use of limited resources
  • To choose between competing demands on limited
    resources
  • In a systematic and transparent way
  • economic evaluation is a form of cost-benefit
    analysis
  • measuring costs and benefits in health care is
    challenging

15
The spectrum of economic evaluation techniques
  • cost-benefit analysis costs benefits assessed
    in money terms (can determine whether benefits
    exceed costs)
  • cost-utility analysis costs in money, benefits
    in an index such as QALYs (quality-adjusted life
    year)
  • cost-minimisation analysis outcome is same for
    all options, so question is just which is least
    cost

16
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