Title: Overview of Health Financing
1Overview of Health Financing
- EAP Regional Seminar on Health Financing
- Bangkok, Thailand, February 2008
- Fadia Saadah, World Bank
2Outline of Presentation
- Demographic and epidemiological trends
- Health spending patterns
- Health financing functions
- Challenges/lessons
3Demographic and Epidemiological Trends
4Demographic Transition Underway Working Age and
Elderly Populations Will Grow Rapidly
5Future GDP Growth in EAP Looks Robust
Source World Bank 2007.
6NCDs and Injuries Represent a Major Share of
BOD(Disease Burden Distributionby Select World
Bank Region, 2001)
Percent
Note Numbers are rounded. Source Disease
Control Priorities in Developing Countries,
second edition, 2006, Table 4.1
7Most EAP Countries Do Well on Child Mortality
Given Their Income and Health Spending Levels
8But Maternal Mortality Results are More Mixed
9Health Spending Patterns
10Health Expenditures Across Regions, by Source of
Financing, 2005
11Public Health Expenditures by Source of Financing
12Total Health Expenditures by Source of Financing
Source Database of the Asia-Pacific National
Health Accounts Network data for recent years
13Public Share of Total Health Spending is
Generally Low
14Out of Pocket Spending as a Share of Total Health
Spending is High Relative to Other Comparable
Income Countries
15Catastrophic impact of health spending
Source EQUITAP study
16Large OOP Share is Related to High Incidence of
Catastrophic Health Spending
Source Equitap study
17Health Financing Functions
18Health Financing Functions and Objectives
Revenue collection
raise sufficient and sustainable revenues in an
efficient and equitable manner to provide
individuals with a basic package of essential
services which improves health outcomes and
provides financial protection and consumer
satisfaction
Pooling
manage these revenues to equitably and
efficiently create insurance pools
Purchasing
assure the purchase of health services in an
allocatively and technically efficient manner
Source Gottret and Schieber, Health Financing
Revisited, World Bank 2006
19Equity Remains an Challenge in EAP (1)
Source Equitap study
20Equity Remains an Challenge in EAP
21Indonesia - Wide Variation in Per Capita Health
Spending Across Provinces
Source World Bank 2006
22(No Transcript)
23What do We Mean by Risk Pooling?
Resource endowment
Resource endowment
Resource endowment
Health risk
Income
Age
24Fragmentation in Health Financing
- In many countries in the region, health financing
is fragmented - Different financing mechanisms for different
groups or sectors of the economy - Thailand Civil Service Medical Scheme and Social
Security Scheme for formal sector UC scheme for
informal sector - China Basic Medical Insurance (BMI) for urban
formal sector New Cooperative Medical Scheme
(NCMS) for rural sector - Laos Civil Service and Social Security Schemes
for formal sector CBHI and other schemes for
informal sector - Fragmentation can also be geographic
- China Both BMI and NCMS are based on city- or
county-wide risk pools - Several countries considering health financing
reforms introducing new sources of financing and
management mechanisms - fragmentation issue needs to be considered early
in design phase
25Universal HI Thailand
TAX
2001
1990
gt50 yrs.
UC
CSMBS
SSS
Contribution
48 mil.
7 mil.
7 mil.
NHSO
MOF Comptroller
SSO
Capitation DRG
Capitation DRG
FFS
Insurees, Right holders
Services
Public Private Providers
26Why is Fragmentation a Problem?
- Administrative inefficiency
- Duplication of tasks and dispersion of scarce
capacity - Lack of portability ? reduced labor market
mobility - Difficult to implement cross-subsidization and
achieve equity goals - Reduced purchasing power and difficult to
create coherent incentives for providers - E.g. different payment systems / rates for
different schemes
27What can be done about fragmentation
- Joint / coordinated management systems and
provider payment arrangements - On the agenda in many countries, but
institutional and political barriers - Unification of schemes
- E.g. integration of health insurance funds in
South Korea in 2000 - Politically challenging
- Risk-pooling at higher geographic level
- Trend towards risk pooling at provincial level
for pensions in China not yet for health
28Efficient Purchasing is Essential
- Will payments be based on results?
- What care will be produced?
- How will care be produced? What about quality?
- To whom will care be offered?
- What kinds of care and how much will consumers
demand/access? - How will will providers be paid and/or consumers
reimbursed?
Source Modified from Rena Eichler, WB, 2003
29Higher Public Spending on Health Does Not
Necessarily Mean Better Health Outcomes
Public spending and child mortality rate are
shown as the percent deviation from rate
predicted by GDP per capita Source Spending and
GDP from World Development Indicators database.
Under-5 mortality from Unicef 2002, WDR 2004
30Financing Challenges/Lessons
- There is no one right financing model.
- System financing must be sustainable
- LICs face difficult tradeoffs between financing
essential services and providing financial risk
protection -- prioritization is critical. - Important to address absorptive capacity and
ability to finance from domestic resources future
recurrent and capital costs.
31Financing Challenges/Lessons
- Many countries trying to achieve universal
coverage, reduce fragmentation, and improve
efficiency. However, key is the impact specific
model is of secondary importance. - Health Financing models need to take into account
the level of income, rate of growth and
institutional and administrative capacity. - Health Financing reforms need to pay great
attention to political economy dimension also
key. - Again, models need to be tailored to individual
countries
32Fiscal Space is Needed
Budgetary room that allows a government to
provide resources for a desired purpose without
any prejudice to the sustainability of its
financial position
- Estimates of revenue effort may suggest that an
additional several percent of GDP could be raised
through domestic revenue measures. - Additional grants from donors are unlikely.
- Spending efficiency can be improved.
- Macroeconomic and debt management may suggest
that new borrowing over the period should be
limited. - Seignorage (govt prints money which it loans to
itself) is yet another, but generally limited,
mechanism for creating fiscal space.
Source World Bank, PREM, 2007.
33Financing Decisions Involve Difficult Trade-offs
Political Criteria
Efficiency
Health Outcomes Financial Protection Consumer
Satisfaction
Affordability
Equity
Sustainability
34Key Messages
- Macroeconomic situation provides good opportunity
to increase financial protection and think about
health financing reforms - Increasing role of private sector models need to
take that into account ensure coordination and
governance - Need to increase efficiency in spending in the
region/Address fragmentation