The redistributive effect of health care finance in twelve OECD countries

The OECD countries finance their health care through a mixture of taxes, social insurance contributions, private insurance premiums and out-of-pocket payments. The various payment sources have very different implications for both vertical and horizontal equity and on redistributive effect which is a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of health economics 1999-06, Vol.18 (3), p.291-313
Hauptverfasser: van Doorslaer, Eddy, Wagstaff, Adam, van der Burg, Hattem, Christiansen, Terkel, Citoni, Guido, Di Biase, Rita, Gerdtham, Ulf-G, Gerfin, Mike, Gross, Lorna, Häkinnen, Unto, John, Jürgen, Johnson, Paul, Klavus, Jan, Lachaud, Claire, Lauritsen, Jørgen, Leu, Robert, Nolan, Brian, Pereira, João, Propper, Carol, Puffer, Frank, Rochaix, Lise, Schellhorn, Martin, Sundberg, Gun, Winkelhake, Olaf
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container_title Journal of health economics
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creator van Doorslaer, Eddy
Wagstaff, Adam
van der Burg, Hattem
Christiansen, Terkel
Citoni, Guido
Di Biase, Rita
Gerdtham, Ulf-G
Gerfin, Mike
Gross, Lorna
Häkinnen, Unto
John, Jürgen
Johnson, Paul
Klavus, Jan
Lachaud, Claire
Lauritsen, Jørgen
Leu, Robert
Nolan, Brian
Pereira, João
Propper, Carol
Puffer, Frank
Rochaix, Lise
Schellhorn, Martin
Sundberg, Gun
Winkelhake, Olaf
description The OECD countries finance their health care through a mixture of taxes, social insurance contributions, private insurance premiums and out-of-pocket payments. The various payment sources have very different implications for both vertical and horizontal equity and on redistributive effect which is a function of both. This paper presents results on the income redistribution consequences of the health care financing mixes adopted in twelve OECD countries by decomposing the overall income redistributive effect into a progressivity, horizontal inequity and reranking component. The general finding of this study is that the vertical effect is much more important than horizontal inequity and reranking in determining the overall redistributive effect but that their relative importance varies by source of payment. Public finance sources tend to have small positive redistributive effects and less differential treatment while private financing sources generally have (larger) negative redistributive effects which are to a substantial degree caused by differential treatment.
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); MEDLINE; RePEc; Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals Complete
subjects Cross-Cultural Comparison
Europe
Finance
Financing, Personal - statistics & numerical data
Funding
Health administration
Health care
Health care financing
Health care policy
Health economics
Health expenditure
Health Policy - economics
Health Services Research
Horizontal equity
Humans
Income redistribution
Insurance, Health - economics
Manycountries
Mathematical economics
Models, Econometric
National Health Programs - economics
Progressivity
Redistributive effect
Redistributive taxation
Reranking
Social Justice
Social security financing
Statistical analysis
Studies
Taxes - classification
Taxes - economics
Taxes - statistics & numerical data
title The redistributive effect of health care finance in twelve OECD countries
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