The Changing Role of the State in Healthcare Financing

Research output: Contributions to collected editions/worksContributions to collected editions/anthologiesResearch

Standard

The Changing Role of the State in Healthcare Financing. / Schmid, Achim; Cacace, Mirella; Rothgang, Heinz.
The State and Healthcare: Comparing OECD Countries. ed. / Heinz Rothgang; Mirella Cacace; Simone Grimmeisen; Claus Wendt. Houndmills/Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2010. p. 25-52 (Transformations of the state).

Research output: Contributions to collected editions/worksContributions to collected editions/anthologiesResearch

Harvard

Schmid, A, Cacace, M & Rothgang, H 2010, The Changing Role of the State in Healthcare Financing. in H Rothgang, M Cacace, S Grimmeisen & C Wendt (eds), The State and Healthcare: Comparing OECD Countries. Transformations of the state, Palgrave Macmillan, Houndmills/Basingstoke, pp. 25-52. https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230292345_3

APA

Schmid, A., Cacace, M., & Rothgang, H. (2010). The Changing Role of the State in Healthcare Financing. In H. Rothgang, M. Cacace, S. Grimmeisen, & C. Wendt (Eds.), The State and Healthcare: Comparing OECD Countries (pp. 25-52). (Transformations of the state). Palgrave Macmillan. https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230292345_3

Vancouver

Schmid A, Cacace M, Rothgang H. The Changing Role of the State in Healthcare Financing. In Rothgang H, Cacace M, Grimmeisen S, Wendt C, editors, The State and Healthcare: Comparing OECD Countries. Houndmills/Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. 2010. p. 25-52. (Transformations of the state). doi: 10.1057/9780230292345_3

Bibtex

@inbook{4d96359f98bd4dbbbf02a1b273cb6acd,
title = "The Changing Role of the State in Healthcare Financing",
abstract = "Institutional legacies are one broad explanation for considerable and persisting differences in the ways nations finance their healthcare systems (Pierson 2004; Taylor-Gooby 1996; Wilsford 1994). Yet it is clear that although all countries throughout the world rely on their own, specific funding-mix in healthcare, this mixture is also subject to readjustment and change (Huber 1998: 63; Scott 2001: 3). Changes in the funding mix may be caused by political interventions such as the inclusion of new groups in a public health1 insurance scheme, changes in co-payment rules or the scope of the benefit package covered by the public system (Maarse 2004b). Different growth trends of healthcare sectors which are predominantly financed by rather private or public funds may also alter the funding-mix substantially (Tuohy et al. 2004). Neither the financing structure nor funding levels have therefore been static during the past decades. While the development of total health expenditure and its determinants have been analyzed extensively, the evolution of public healthcare spending and of differences in the funding-mix across countries have attracted less attention (Barros 2007; for notable exceptions see Castles 2004; Comas-Herrera 1999; Mossialos and Dixon 2002; Starke et al. 2008). In this chapter we scrutinize the role of the state as a financer versus other sources of financing since the early 1970s in 23 OECD countries (see Chapter 1).",
keywords = "Health sciences, Health Expenditure, public spending, purchase power parity, public healthcare, private financing",
author = "Achim Schmid and Mirella Cacace and Heinz Rothgang",
year = "2010",
doi = "10.1057/9780230292345_3",
language = "English",
isbn = "978-0230005488",
series = "Transformations of the state",
publisher = "Palgrave Macmillan",
pages = "25--52",
editor = "Heinz Rothgang and Mirella Cacace and Simone Grimmeisen and Claus Wendt",
booktitle = "The State and Healthcare",
address = "Switzerland",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - The Changing Role of the State in Healthcare Financing

AU - Schmid, Achim

AU - Cacace, Mirella

AU - Rothgang, Heinz

PY - 2010

Y1 - 2010

N2 - Institutional legacies are one broad explanation for considerable and persisting differences in the ways nations finance their healthcare systems (Pierson 2004; Taylor-Gooby 1996; Wilsford 1994). Yet it is clear that although all countries throughout the world rely on their own, specific funding-mix in healthcare, this mixture is also subject to readjustment and change (Huber 1998: 63; Scott 2001: 3). Changes in the funding mix may be caused by political interventions such as the inclusion of new groups in a public health1 insurance scheme, changes in co-payment rules or the scope of the benefit package covered by the public system (Maarse 2004b). Different growth trends of healthcare sectors which are predominantly financed by rather private or public funds may also alter the funding-mix substantially (Tuohy et al. 2004). Neither the financing structure nor funding levels have therefore been static during the past decades. While the development of total health expenditure and its determinants have been analyzed extensively, the evolution of public healthcare spending and of differences in the funding-mix across countries have attracted less attention (Barros 2007; for notable exceptions see Castles 2004; Comas-Herrera 1999; Mossialos and Dixon 2002; Starke et al. 2008). In this chapter we scrutinize the role of the state as a financer versus other sources of financing since the early 1970s in 23 OECD countries (see Chapter 1).

AB - Institutional legacies are one broad explanation for considerable and persisting differences in the ways nations finance their healthcare systems (Pierson 2004; Taylor-Gooby 1996; Wilsford 1994). Yet it is clear that although all countries throughout the world rely on their own, specific funding-mix in healthcare, this mixture is also subject to readjustment and change (Huber 1998: 63; Scott 2001: 3). Changes in the funding mix may be caused by political interventions such as the inclusion of new groups in a public health1 insurance scheme, changes in co-payment rules or the scope of the benefit package covered by the public system (Maarse 2004b). Different growth trends of healthcare sectors which are predominantly financed by rather private or public funds may also alter the funding-mix substantially (Tuohy et al. 2004). Neither the financing structure nor funding levels have therefore been static during the past decades. While the development of total health expenditure and its determinants have been analyzed extensively, the evolution of public healthcare spending and of differences in the funding-mix across countries have attracted less attention (Barros 2007; for notable exceptions see Castles 2004; Comas-Herrera 1999; Mossialos and Dixon 2002; Starke et al. 2008). In this chapter we scrutinize the role of the state as a financer versus other sources of financing since the early 1970s in 23 OECD countries (see Chapter 1).

KW - Health sciences

KW - Health Expenditure

KW - public spending

KW - purchase power parity

KW - public healthcare

KW - private financing

U2 - 10.1057/9780230292345_3

DO - 10.1057/9780230292345_3

M3 - Contributions to collected editions/anthologies

SN - 978-0230005488

T3 - Transformations of the state

SP - 25

EP - 52

BT - The State and Healthcare

A2 - Rothgang, Heinz

A2 - Cacace, Mirella

A2 - Grimmeisen, Simone

A2 - Wendt, Claus

PB - Palgrave Macmillan

CY - Houndmills/Basingstoke

ER -

DOI