Narayana Muttur Ranganathan
Centre for Economic Studies and Policy, Institute for Social and Economic Change, Nagarabhavi P.O., Bengaluru, 560072, Karnataka, India.
Appl Health Econ Health Policy. 2016 Dec;14(6):673-690. doi: 10.1007/s40258-016-0270-1.
India's High Level Expert Group on Universal Health Coverage in 2011 recommended a universal, public-funded and national health coverage policy. As a plausible forward-looking macroeconomic reform in the health sector, this policy proposal on universal health coverage (UHC) needs to be evaluated for age structure transition effect and fiscal sustainability to strengthen its current design and future implementation.
Macroeconomic analyses of the long-term implications of age structure transition and fiscal sustainability on India's proposed UHC policy.
A new measure of age-specific UHC is developed by combining the age profile of public and private health consumption expenditure by using the National Transfer Accounts methodology. Different projections of age-specific public health expenditure are calculated over the period 2005-2100 to account for the age structure transition effect. The projections include changes in: (1) levels of the expenditure as gross domestic product grows, (2) levels and shape of the expenditure as gross domestic product grows and expenditure converges to that of developed countries (or convergence scenario) based on the Lee-Carter model of forecasting mortality rates, and (3) levels of the expenditure as India moves toward a UHC policy. Fiscal sustainability under each health expenditure projection is determined by using the measures of generational imbalance and sustainability gap in the Generational Accounting methodology.
Public health expenditure is marked by age specificities and the elderly population is costlier to support for their healthcare needs in the future. Given the discount and productivity growth rates, the proposed UHC is not fiscally sustainable under India's current fiscal policies except for the convergence scenario. However, if the income elasticity of public expenditure on social welfare and health expenditure is less than one, fiscal sustainability of the UHC policy is attainable in all scenarios of projected public health expenditures. These new results strengthen the proposed UHC policy by accounting for age structure transition effect and justifying its sustainability within the framework of India's current fiscal policies.
The age structure transition effect is important to incorporate the age-specific cost and benefit of the proposed UHC policy, especially as India moves toward an ageing society. Fiscal sustainability is essential to ensure that the proposed UHC is implementable on a long-term basis and within the framework of current fiscal policies.
印度2011年全民健康覆盖高级专家组建议实施一项全民、公共资助的国家健康覆盖政策。作为卫生部门一项合理的前瞻性宏观经济改革,这项关于全民健康覆盖(UHC)的政策提案需要评估其对年龄结构转变的影响以及财政可持续性,以强化其当前设计和未来实施。
对年龄结构转变和财政可持续性对印度拟议的全民健康覆盖政策的长期影响进行宏观经济分析。
运用国家转移账户方法,结合公共和私人卫生消费支出的年龄分布,开发了一种新的特定年龄全民健康覆盖衡量指标。计算2005年至2100年期间不同的特定年龄公共卫生支出预测值,以考虑年龄结构转变的影响。这些预测包括以下方面的变化:(1)随着国内生产总值增长,支出水平;(2)基于李-卡特死亡率预测模型,随着国内生产总值增长且支出向发达国家趋同(或趋同情景)时,支出的水平和形态;(3)随着印度朝着全民健康覆盖政策迈进,支出水平。利用代际核算方法中的代际失衡和可持续性差距指标,确定每个卫生支出预测下的财政可持续性。
公共卫生支出具有年龄特异性,未来支持老年人口的医疗保健需求成本更高。考虑到贴现率和生产率增长率,除趋同情景外,按照印度当前财政政策,拟议的全民健康覆盖在财政上不可持续。然而,如果社会福利和卫生支出的公共支出收入弹性小于1,在所有预测的公共卫生支出情景下,全民健康覆盖政策的财政可持续性均可实现。这些新结果通过考虑年龄结构转变影响并在印度当前财政政策框架内论证其可持续性,强化了拟议的全民健康覆盖政策。
年龄结构转变影响对于纳入拟议的全民健康覆盖政策的特定年龄成本和效益很重要,尤其是在印度迈向老龄化社会的情况下。财政可持续性对于确保拟议的全民健康覆盖能够在长期内且在当前财政政策框架内得以实施至关重要。