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Lecture 18: Globalization and Health

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Title: Lecture 18: Globalization and Health


1
Lecture 18Globalization and Health
  • Richard Smith
  • Reader in Health Economics
  • School of Medicine, Health Policy Practice

Health Economics SOCE3B11 Autumn 04/05
2
Overview of lecture
  • What is globalization?
  • Relationship between globalization and health
  • Aspects of globalization that may effect health
  • Health, international trade and WTO
  • Trade in health services and GATS

3
What is Globalization?
  • Easier travel communication
  • Mixing of customs cultures
  • Integration of national economies (removal of
    barriers to international trade finance)
    liberalization or openness
  • Means cannot view national health, interventions
    and policies in isolation from
  • other countries
  • other sectors (e.g. travel, finance)

4
Globalization
economic opening
cross-border flows
goods, services, capital, people, ideas,
information
international rules and institutions
national economy and health-related sectors
health services
risk factors
household economy
HEALTH
5
Aspects of Globalization thatmay effect Health
  • General effect on health from changes in national
    economic growth link between health and
    wealth
  • Environmental degradation (e.g. air, water
    pollution)
  • Improved access to knowledge and technology
  • Marketing of harmful products unhealthy
    behaviours
  • Conflict security
  • Cross-border transmission of disease

6
Emerging/re-emerging infectious diseases 1996 to
2003
Legionnaires Disease
Multidrug resistant Salmonella
Cryptosporidiosis
E.coli O157
E.coli non-O157
Typhoid
BSE
SARS
Malaria
nvCJD
Diphtheria
West Nile Virus
Reston virus
Influenza (H5N1)
Echinococcosis
Lassa fever
Nipah Virus
Yellow fever
Cholera 0139
Reston Virus
RVF/VHF
Venezuelan Equine Encephalitis
Buruli ulcer
Dengue haemhorrhagic fever
Onyong-nyong fever
Ebola haemorrhagic fever
Human Monkeypox
Dengue haemhorrhagic fever
Cholera
Cholera
Equine morbillivirus
Ross River virus
Hendra virus
7
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8
Health and International Trade
  • Context Effects of trade liberalisation on
    public health
  • Trade removal of impediments to
  • liberalisation trade in goods and services
    (especially via WTO)
  • Public health organised measures (public /or
    private) to prevent disease, promote health
    or prolong life of the population as a whole

9
Specific Public Health Issues
  • Infectious disease control
  • Food safety
  • Tobacco
  • Environment
  • Access to drugs
  • Food security
  • Emerging issues (biotechnology.)
  • Health services

10
WTO Agreements
  • Goods GATT
  • Technical barriers to trade SPS, TBT
  • Intellectual property and trade TRIPS
  • Services GATS

11
Specific Health Issues and most relevant WTO
Agreements
12
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13
Trade in Health Services/GATS Background
  • International trade growing, trade in services
    is increasing percentage of this overall growth
  • Of this trade, health sector is already affected
    by liberalization in other areas (e.g. finance)
  • Many countries see health as a sector where they
    may have a comparative trade advantage
  • More countries seeking to ascend to WTO and
    therefore make commitments under GATS

14
General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS)
  • GATS emerged from 1994 Uruguay Round of
    negotiations that created the WTO (Members agree
    to progressive liberalization)
  • Subject services trade to same treatment as
    goods (GATT)
  • Basis liberalization increases global
    efficiency (comparative advantage lower cost,
    higher quality, innovation)
  • Provides multilateral legal framework for
    liberalizing international services trade (based
    on existing int. trade law)
  • Debate is polarized - Tale of Two Treaties
  • GATS is worst of treaties undermines national
    sovereignty
  • GATS is best of treaties increase health
    (sovereignty)

15
The House that GATS Built
GATS (Services)
GATS Council
16
GATS Timetable
  • 1994 Uruguay Round of WTO negotiations saw
    initial commitments in health services made by a
    handful of countries
  • Current negotiations began following WTO meeting
    in February 2000
  • initial requests for specific commitments made by
    end June 2002
  • initial offers due by end of March 2003
  • finalised agreement by end of January 2005

17
The GATS Process
  • Countries (via MoT) select service sector(s) they
    wish to open to foreign suppliers
  • A commitment is then made within this sector
    within each mode individually or combined
    stating limitations to how much access foreign
    providers are allowed
  • Commitments are multilateral no favourites

18
Key Aspects of GATS
  • Creates binary system either solely public
    provided (hence not covered by GATS) or not
  • Commitments potentially irreversible changes
    possible (gt 3 years) but entail compensation
    (offering new commitments in other sectors with a
    view to restoring the balance of commitments
    which existed prior to the modification)
  • GATS excludes services supplied in the exercise
    of governmental authority debate on coverage
  • MFN principle
  • Structure four modes of supply

19
Threshold Question Does GATS Apply?
S T A R T
Is the health-related service supplied by a
private actor pursuant to delegated governmental
authority?
No
Is the health-related service supplied by the
government?
Yes
Yes
Is the health-related service supplied on a
commercial basis?
No
Yes
No
Is the health-related service supplied in
competition with one or more service providers?
GATS applies to measures of WTO members that
affect trade in health-related services
Yes
No
GATS does not apply
20
Structure of GATSFour Modes of Supply
  1. Cross border delivery (e-health)
  2. Consumption abroad (movt. of patients)
  3. Commercial presence (FDI hospitals)
  4. Movement of personnel (doctors abroad)

21
Mode 1Cross border delivery of services
  • Shipment of laboratory samples, diagnosis and
    clinical consultations by mail
  • E-health
  • Telediagnostic
  • Telesurveillance
  • Teleconsultation
  • Teletreatment
  • Teleproducts (especially phamaceuticals)

22
Mode 1 Opportunities
  • Enable health care delivery to remote and
    underserviced areas promoting equity
  • Alleviate (some) human resource constraints
  • Enable more cost-effective disease surveillance
  • Improve quality of diagnosis and treatment
  • Upgrade skills, disseminate knowledge through
    interactive electronic means

23
Mode 1 Risks
  • Relies on telecommunications and power sector
    infrastructure
  • Capital intensive, possible diversion of
    resources from basic preventive and curative
    services
  • Equity issue if it caters to a small segment of
    the population - urban affluent

24
Mode 2Consumption abroad
  • Movement of patients from home country to the
    country providing the diagnosis/treatment
  • Movement of health professionals from home to
    another country to receive medical education and
    training

25
Mode 2 Opportunities
  • For exporting countries
  • Generate foreign exchange earnings to increase
    resources for health
  • Upgrade health infrastructure, knowledge,
    standards and quality
  • For importing countries
  • Overcome shortages of physical and human
    resources in speciality areas
  • Receive more affordable treatment

26
Mode 2 Risks
  • Create dual market structure
  • May crowd out local population unless these
    services are made available to local population
  • Diversion of resources from the public health
    system
  • Outflow of foreign exchange for importing
    countries

27
Mode 3Commercial presence
  • Establishment of hospitals, clinics, diagnostic
    and treatment centres and nursing homes and
    training facilities through foreign direct
    investment cross border mergers/acquisitions,
    joint venture/alliance
  • Opportunities for foreign commercial presence
    also in management of health facilities and
    allied services, medical and paramedical
    education, IT and health care

28
Mode 3 Opportunities
  • Generate additional resources for investment in
    upgrading of infrastructure and technologies
  • Reduce the burden on public resources
  • Create employment opportunities
  • Raise standards, improve management, quality ,
    improve availability, improve education (foreign
    commercial presence in medical education sector)

29
Mode 3 Risks
  • Large initial public investments to attract FDI
  • If public funds/subsidies used - potential
    diversion of resources from the public health
    sector
  • Two tier structure of health care establishments
  • Internal brain drain from public to private
    sector
  • Crowding out of poorer patients, cream skimming
    phenomena

30
Mode 4Movement of Health Professionals
  • Includes doctors, nurses, paramedics, midwives,
    consultants, trainers, management personnel
  • Factors driving cross border movements
  • wage differentials between countries
  • search for better working conditions/standards
    of living
  • search for greater exposure/training/qualificatio
    ns
  • demand and supply imbalances between countries
  • Approach towards mode 4 trade in health services
    by exporting and receiving countries varies -
    some countries encourage outflow, others create
    impediments

31
Mode 4 Opportunities
  • From sending country
  • Promote exchange of knowledge among professionals
  • Upgrade skills and standards (provided service
    providers return to the home country)
  • Gains from remittances and transfers
  • From host country
  • Meet shortage of health care providers, improve
    access, quality and contain cost pressures

32
Mode 4 Risks
  • From sending country
  • Permanent outflows of skilled personnel -
    brain drain
  • Loss of subsidised training and financial capital
    invested
  • Adverse effects on equity, availability and
    quality of services

33
Scope of analysis
34
Status of GATS Commitments(No. WTO Members by
Sector)
35
Commitments of WTO Members in Health Services
Number of WTO Members number (2004) with
commitments in health (developed/developing) Med
ical/dental services 62 (18/44) (excl.
USA) Nurses/midwives 34 (17/17)
(excl.USA) Hospital services 52 (15/37) (incl.
USA) Other human health 22 (2/20) (excl. USA
EC) No commitments at all 39 (e.g.
Canada, Brazil)
36
Commitments Market Access
37
Commitments National Treatment
38
Summary of GATS Commitments
  • Generally, number of sectors committed positively
    related to the level of economic development
  • But - pattern in health services less clear
  • Far more developing than developed country
    commitments
  • E.g Canada no commitments, USA/Japan only one
    whereas LDCs (Burundi, Gambia, Zambia etc) have 3
    or 4 subsectors
  • Of 4 subsectors medical/dental most heavily
    committed (62), followed by hospital (52).
  • Highest share of full market access recorded for
    mode 2
  • Developed countries use limitations on modes 2
    3 more than developing countries
  • No Member undertaken full commitments for mode 4
    (highly restricted area)

39
GATS 3 Key Questions
  • Why are current levels of trade in health
    services low?
  • presence of government monopolies likely to be
    rare
  • no pace setters in health (c.f.
    telecommunications/financial services)
  • different economic value (c.f.
    telecommunications/financial services)
  • How will GATS effect a countrys health
    sovereignty/system?
  • depends on interpretation of commercial basis
    and in competition
  • general obligations MFN, pursuing increased
    liberalization, exception for measures
    necessary to protect health, dispute
    settlement
  • horizontal commitments made for other sectors
  • What effect might liberalization have on national
    health/wealth?
  • currently data free environment even extent of
    openness/liberalization!
  • research required on impact of liberalization on
    population health status, distribution of health
    services/status, economic factors (GDP, BoP etc)
    and how GATS compares with other agreements

40
Further References
  • See references for Seminar 6
  • Smith RD. Foreign direct investment and trade in
    health services a review of the literature.
    Social Science and Medicine, 2004 59 2313-2323.
  • For future ref
  • Blouin C, Drager N, Smith RD (eds). Trade in
    Health Services, developing countries and the
    GATS. Oxford University Press (in press).
  • Smith RD. Trade in Health Services Current
    Challenges and Future Prospects of Globalisation.
    In Jones AM (ed). Elgar Companion to Health
    Economics. Edward Elgar (in press).
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