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Journal ArticleOpen Access

The Incidence of Public Spending on Healthcare: Comparative Evidence from Asia

Author Affiliations
Universitas Gadjah Mada, University of Macedonia, Jahangirnagar University, Erasmus University Rotterdam
Published InThe World Bank Economic Review
Year2007
Citations202

Abstract

The article compares the incidence of public healthcare across 11 Asian countries and provinces, testing the dominance of healthcare concentration curves against an equal distribution and Lorenz curves and across countries. The analysis reveals that the distribution of public healthcare is prorich in most developing countries. That distribution is avoidable, but a propoor incidence is easier to realize at higher national incomes. The experiences of Malaysia, Sri Lanka, and Thailand suggest that increasing the incidence of propoor healthcare requires limiting the use of user fees, or protecting the poor effectively from them, and building a wide network of health facilities. Economic growth may not only relax the government budget constraint on propoor policies but also increase propoor incidence indirectly by…
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