MANY European countries saw further reductions in health spending in 2013, according
to OECD Health Statistics 2015. Health spending continued to shrink in Greece,
Italy and Portugal in 2013. Most countries in the European Union reported real
per capita health spending below the levels of 2009. Outside of Europe, health
spending has been growing at around 2.5% per year since 2010.
health statistics 2015Health spending growth has generally in line with economic
growth, so health expenditure as a share of GDP remained stable relative to 2012.
This is in contrast to the years leading up to the economic crisis, when health
spending strongly outpaced the rest of the economy. In 2013, health spending
(excluding investment) as a share of GDP was 8.9%, ranking from 5.1% in Turkey
to 16.4% in the United States.
Outside of the European Union, average real growth in health spending was around
2.6% in 2013, bolstered by strong growth in Asia and South America. In Chile
and Korea, health spending growth was above 5% in 2013; the level of per capita
spending has increased in both by close to 25% in real terms since 2009.
Figures for Canada show a continuing trend of health spending growth below that
of economic growth. In the United States, health spending grew by 1.5% in 2013,
less than half the average annual growth rate in the United States prior to 2009.
The latest available forecasts from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services
point to faster growth in 2014 as more Americans gain health insurance coverage.
Preliminary growth figures for a dozen OECD countries suggest a similar modest
increase in spending overall in 2014, but with growth remaining well below the
pre-crisis levels.
Three-quarters of health spending continues to come from public sources across
OECD countries, but cost-containment measures in some countries have led to an
increase in the private share - either through private health insurance or direct
payments by households. Greece and Portugal have seen the private share of health
spending increase by around 4 percentage points since 2009, the largest increases
in the OECD, resulting in a third of all health spending coming from private
sources in 2013 in both countries.
These are some of the recent health spending trends shown in OECD Health Statistics
2015, the most comprehensive source of comparable statistics on health and health
systems across the 34 OECD countries and key emerging economies. Covering the
period 1960 to 2014, this interactive database can be used for comparative analyses
on health status, risk factors to health, health care resources and utilisation,
and health expenditure and financing.
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