Title: Public Expenditures Review in Health
1Public Expenditures Review in Health
- Agnes Soucat, Lead Economist
2Presentation Outline
- Objectives of the health sector and role of the
government - Objective of a PER
- Efficiency Analysis and PERs
- Equity Analysis and PERs
- Financing
- What about the health MDGs ?
3Why investing in health ?
- Objectives of the health sector and role of the
government
4Objectives of the health sector
- Improving health outcomes mortality,
incidence/prevalence of diseases, suffering.. - Income protection health expenditures,
catastrophic illnesses - Responsiveness and accountability demand,
quality of life
5The role of the Government Rationale for public
action in health
- Market failures
- Public good commons non excludable, non
rejectable, non competitive - Merit goods with a high level of externalities
- Failures in the insurance market
- Redistribution/Welfare
- Benefiting the poor
- protecting the poor
6Priority areas for public financing in health
Market Failures Redistribution
Health outcomes Pure public goods Merit high externalities goods Poor have worse health outcomes
Income protection Insurance market eg adverse selection Poor are more exposed to financial consequences of illnesses
Responsiveness and accountability Poor have less voice to influence policy decisions
7Specificity of the health sector
- Outputs are health sector specific but outcomes
are multisectoral - Levels are intricated
- Multiplicity of outputs
8Health sector
Finance
Agriculture
Social Protection
Infras tructure
Water and Sanitation
Education Sector
Health Outcomes Litteracy etc.. Improve
Quality of Life
Revenue generation Safety nets Increase and
Protect Income
Participation Increase Involvement
9Presentation Outline
- Objectives of the health sector and role of the
government - Objectives of a PER
- Efficiency Analysis and PERs
- Equity Analysis and PERs
- Financing
10Objectives of a PER in health
- Analyze the amounts of public financing flowing
into health related activities whetehre publicly
or privately provided, with a focus on analyzing
public policies - Analyze the performance of the overall health
system (public and private) in - ensuring sustainable financing and quality
service delivery - Contributing to better health and protection from
catastrophic expenditures in an equitable manner - N.B. National Health Accounts focus on the
accounting story while a PER focuses on the
analysis of public policies
11Presentation Outline
- Objectives of the health sector and role of the
government - Objectives of a PER
- Efficiency Analysis and PERs
- Equity Analysis and PERs
- Financing
- What about the health MDGs ?
12Efficiency Analysis and PERs
- Examples Efficiency Analysis
- Allocative efficiency does money go to priority
areas? - Technical efficiency are the inputs minimized
for a given output? - Input efficiency Is the balance of inputs
appropriate?
13Weak link between public spending and health
outcomes
Percent deviation from rate predicted by GDP
per capita Source Spending and GDP from World
Development Indicators database. Under-5
mortality from Unicef 2002
14Allocative Efficiency
- Key questions
- Is the public spending focused on addressing
market failures ie pure (or nearly pure) public
goods or goods with large externalities,
including failures of insurance markets ? - Is the public spending focused on activities that
contribute to increased returns in education and
investments, economic growth and poverty
reduction? - Is the public spending focused on activities that
are most likely to benefit the poor?
15Priority Programs (examples)
- vector control eg snails, rats, mosquitos .
- environmental health eg toxic wastes, quality
of water, clean air - communicable disease surveillance and management
eg Tuberculosis - Immunizations herd immunity
16 Contribution to Economic Growth and Poverty
Reduction ..
Improvements in health and economic take-off
changes in Per Capita GDP and IMR in
Singapore
Per capita GDP 1990
17Contribution to Economic Growth and Poverty
Reduction ..
IMR at the time of Economic Take-off in East Asia
18Contribution to Economic Growth and Poverty
Reduction ..
- Nutrition in agriculture based economies
- Some diseases HIV, malaria
- Child mortality, fertility reduction associated
with high investment in education and low
dependency ratios
19Allocative Efficiency
Programmatic allocation Rwanda
20Efficiency Analysis and PERs
- Examples Efficiency Analysis
- Allocative efficiency does money go to priority
areas? - Technical efficiency are the inputs minimized
for a given output? - Input efficiency Is the balance of inputs
appropriate?
21Technical Efficiency
- Key questions
- What is the relative weight of various
sub-sectors - (e.g. Tertiary VS Secondary VS Primary VS
outreach VS community based programs ) - What is the mix of services provided
- (e.g. Curative Vs Preventive)
22Technical Efficiency
23Technical Efficiency
Relative allocation to levels of care Mauritania
24Inter-country comparison measles immunization
vs public expenditures
25Efficiency Analysis and PERs
- Examples Efficiency Analysis
- Allocative efficiency does money go to priority
areas? - Technical efficiency are the inputs minimized
for a given output? - Input efficiency Is the balance of inputs
appropriate?
26Input Efficiency
- Key questions
- Are recurrent cost at the level required by
capital invested (eg unreliable, insufficient
funding of key inputs (drugs)..) - Are Non-Salary Recurrent expenditures and the
wage bill balanced? (e.g salaries crowding out
other inputs, non salary recurrent recycled
into staff incentives)
27Evolution of health budget Mauritania
Input Efficiency
28Input Efficiency
- Evolution of health budget Rwanda
Budget of the Ministry of Health by nature of
Expenditures
29Presentation Outline
- Objectives of the health sector and role of the
government - Objectives of a PER
- Efficiency Analysis and PERs
- Equity Analysis and PERs
- Financing
30Equity Analysis and PERs
- Examples Equity Analysis
- Physical Access
- Human Resource Deployment
- Availability of Drugs or other inputs
- Benefit Incidence Analysis
- Equity and Financing Mechanisms
- Insurance Incidence
- Impact of Cost Recovery
31Physical Access to Essential Health Services,
Mauritania, 1999
Richer
Poorer
32Availability of Nurses and Infant
Mortality-Cameroon 1999
33Availability of Essential Drugs per Region,
Mauritania, 1999
Poorer
Richer
34BIA India ExampleWho Gets the Public Subsidy?
35Population covered by publicly funded health
insurance, Thailand 2000
36Presentation Outline
- Objectives of the health sector and role of the
government - Objectives of a PER
- Efficiency Analysis and PERs
- Equity Analysis and PERs
- Financing
- What about the health MDGs ?
37Private spending equals or exceeds public
spending in SSA
38Donors are a major source of funding in some
countries
Financing sourcesRwanda
Financing of health services
39Lack of Predictability of Donor Assistance
40Tax finance doesnt guarantee poor do well
41Presentation Outline
- Objectives of the health sector and role of the
government - Objectives of a PER
- Efficiency Analysis and PERs
- Equity Analysis and PERs
- Financing
- What about the health MDGs ?
42Ethiopia MDGs Needs Assesment total
incremental cost per capita 2005-2015
43Expected impact of key interventions on under
five mortality rate, Ethiopia 2005- 2015
Estimated U5 mortality reduction by 2009 is 48
and 61 by 2015 . MMR 36
44Government Health Expenditures as a Percent of
GDP Needed for a 34 Per Capita CMH Recommended
Package of Services
45Cost of scaling up health services incremental
cost per capita 2005-2015 for reaching the MDGs
Scale Up Strategy Health Outcomes MDGs reached
Step 5 Expansion and Upgrade of Referral Care Further decrease of child mortality, maternal mortality, HIV MTC transmission Provision of HAART , multi-drug resistant TB and severe malaria treatment
Step 4 Expansion and Upgrade of Emergency Obstetrical care Further decrease of child mortality maternal mortality HIV MTC transmission Reduced MM by 75
Step 3 First level clinical upgrade Further decrease of Child mortality Maternal Mortality Malaria, morbidity mortality TB Reduced malaria mortality by 50 Increase TB DOTS coverage
Step 2 Health Services Extension Program Decrease in child mortality Reduction in HIV Mother To Child Transmission Reduction of deaths due to pregnancy by 40 Reduce malaria mortality morbidity Reduce Child malnutrition Reduced child mortality by two third
Step 1 Information and Social Mobilization for Behavior change Decrease in child mortality due to HIV, malaria, diarrhea diseases Reduced HIV transmission Reduced malaria morbidity and mortality Reversed trend in HIV incidence and stabilized trend in HIV prevalence
46Prediction on achieving MDG for child survival in
Ethiopia
Deaths per thousand births
Achieving the Health extension/outreach service
targets
Achieving the family/community based service
targets
Achieving the clinical based service targets
47Conclusion best practices
- Focus on who captures public funding
particularly distribution between rich and poor - Combine routine HMIS data with with households
surveys - Place public spending in the context of private
expenditures (households insurance, donors) - Examine trends..dynamic analysis
- Evaluate expenditures in the context of changes
(e.g decentralisation, epidemiological
transition, etc.) - Include recommendations on how to improve public
expenditures allocation and management