Published on NCD Alliance (https://old.ncdalliance.org)

Home > Global health spending grows but more money needed for primary care - WHO

Global health spending grows but more money needed for primary care - WHO

English
© 2104 Md. Qamrul Ahsan, Courtesy Photoshare

Global spending on health is growing, with data from 2000-2016 showing more domestic public funding and less external financing, says a new WHO report. Health spending now accounts for 10% of the global gross domestic product.

Health spending includes government expenditure, out-of-pocket payments (people paying for their own care), and sources such as voluntary health insurance, employer-provided health programmes, and activities by non-governmental organizations.

“Increased domestic spending is essential for achieving universal health coverage and the health-related Sustainable Development Goals” - Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO Director-General

Governments provide on average 51% of a country’s health spending, while more than 35% comes from out-of-pocket expenses, says the report, Public Spending on Health: A Closer Look at Global Trends [1]. One consequence of this is 100 million people pushed into extreme poverty each year. However, increasing domestic public funding for health in low- and middle-income countries means that reliance on out-of-pocket expenses is slowly declining around the world.

$60 spent per person in lower-middle income countries

In middle-income countries, government health expenditure per capita has doubled since the year 2000. On average, governments spend US$60 per person on health in lower-middle income countries (LMICs) and close to US$270 per person in upper-middle income countries.

While health spending is rising almost 6% yearly in LMICs, versus 4% in high-income ones, low-income countries are lagging behind in public spending on health, found the report.

“Increased domestic spending is essential for achieving universal health coverage and the health-related Sustainable Development Goals,” said Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO Director-General. “But health spending is not a cost, it’s an investment in poverty reduction, jobs, productivity, inclusive economic growth, and healthier, safer, fairer societies.”
 

See the report. [1]
 

Post Date: 
Monday, 25 February, 2019
Tags: 
health systems [2]
primary healthcare [3]
Category - News: 
Announcements
Search Keywords: 
health spending, healthcare, universal health coverage
Related Resource: 
144th WHO EB Statement on Item 5.5: Universal health coverage: Primary health care towards universal health coverage [4]
Related Link: 
Public Spending on Health: A Closer Look at Global Trends [1]
Tag feed: 
universal health coverage [5]

Source URL: https://old.ncdalliance.org/news-events/news/global-health-spending-grows-but-more-money-needed-for-primary-care-who

Links
[1] https://www.who.int/news-room/detail/20-02-2019-countries-are-spending-more-on-health-but-people-are-still-paying-too-much-out-of-their-own-pockets
[2] https://old.ncdalliance.org/taxonomy/term/319
[3] https://old.ncdalliance.org/taxonomy/term/834
[4] https://old.ncdalliance.org/resources/144th-who-eb-statement-on-item-55-universal-health-coverage-primary-health-care-towards-universal-health-coverage
[5] https://old.ncdalliance.org/taxonomy/term/30