Abstract: The conventional method used to project a country's future health care expenditures
is to assume that relative health spending by age remains constant. This method
has been criticized as being too pessimistic, on the one hand, because of continued
improvements in the health status of older people, and as too optimistic, on the other,
because of the effects of technological innovations on increasing health spending on
the elderly relative to the nonelderly. This paper uses cross-country data to shed
light on this question. I find that, contrary to conventional wisdom, the theoretical
effects of technology on health spending are to decrease the concentration of health
spending on the elderly. Empirically, I find that relative health spending by age has
been quite stable over time. I also find that countries with the most technologically
intensive health sectors spend relatively less on the oldest old compared to the
younger old.
Keywords: Health spending,technology,international
Full paper (215 KB PDF)
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Last update: March 29, 2004
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