How You Pay Determines What You Get: Alternative Financing Options as a Determinant of Publicly Funded Health Care in Canada

A Canadian returning home from a visit to a physician has no idea of the cost of providing the service just received. This is true for two reasons. One is because he or she does not receive a bill to pay. The other reason has to do the myriad of ways provincial governments fund the provision of heal...

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Main Author: Ronald D. Kneebone
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Calgary 2012-06-01
Series:The School of Public Policy Publications
Online Access:https://www.policyschool.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/r-kneebone-althealthpayfinal.pdf
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spelling doaj-729acebc7a9744c99185af3be865a00f2020-11-24T22:45:32ZengUniversity of CalgaryThe School of Public Policy Publications2560-83122560-83202012-06-01521127https://doi.org/10.11575/sppp.v5i0.42392How You Pay Determines What You Get: Alternative Financing Options as a Determinant of Publicly Funded Health Care in CanadaRonald D. Kneebone0University of CalgaryA Canadian returning home from a visit to a physician has no idea of the cost of providing the service just received. This is true for two reasons. One is because he or she does not receive a bill to pay. The other reason has to do the myriad of ways provincial governments fund the provision of health care. Health care is financed by a wide variety of types of taxation, by intergovernmental transfers determined by opaque and changing rules, by borrowing against future taxes and by drawing down savings. Confusion over how health care is funded creates a fiscal illusion that it is cheaper than it really is; a fiscal illusion that grows larger the less provincial governments rely on taxing individuals. In this paper it is shown that when provincial health spending is financed in ways other than taxation, it grows two to three times more quickly than it would have otherwise. From 2001-2008 alone, these distortions amounted to $6.75 billion at the national level, draining funds from other government services many of which have been shown to keep Canadians healthier and so reduce their demand for health care. Simply put, when Canadians are clear about the true cost of health care they more effectively play the traditional role of consumers by guarding against waste and inefficiency and so contribute to a more efficient and effective publicly-funded health care system.https://www.policyschool.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/r-kneebone-althealthpayfinal.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
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author Ronald D. Kneebone
spellingShingle Ronald D. Kneebone
How You Pay Determines What You Get: Alternative Financing Options as a Determinant of Publicly Funded Health Care in Canada
The School of Public Policy Publications
author_facet Ronald D. Kneebone
author_sort Ronald D. Kneebone
title How You Pay Determines What You Get: Alternative Financing Options as a Determinant of Publicly Funded Health Care in Canada
title_short How You Pay Determines What You Get: Alternative Financing Options as a Determinant of Publicly Funded Health Care in Canada
title_full How You Pay Determines What You Get: Alternative Financing Options as a Determinant of Publicly Funded Health Care in Canada
title_fullStr How You Pay Determines What You Get: Alternative Financing Options as a Determinant of Publicly Funded Health Care in Canada
title_full_unstemmed How You Pay Determines What You Get: Alternative Financing Options as a Determinant of Publicly Funded Health Care in Canada
title_sort how you pay determines what you get: alternative financing options as a determinant of publicly funded health care in canada
publisher University of Calgary
series The School of Public Policy Publications
issn 2560-8312
2560-8320
publishDate 2012-06-01
description A Canadian returning home from a visit to a physician has no idea of the cost of providing the service just received. This is true for two reasons. One is because he or she does not receive a bill to pay. The other reason has to do the myriad of ways provincial governments fund the provision of health care. Health care is financed by a wide variety of types of taxation, by intergovernmental transfers determined by opaque and changing rules, by borrowing against future taxes and by drawing down savings. Confusion over how health care is funded creates a fiscal illusion that it is cheaper than it really is; a fiscal illusion that grows larger the less provincial governments rely on taxing individuals. In this paper it is shown that when provincial health spending is financed in ways other than taxation, it grows two to three times more quickly than it would have otherwise. From 2001-2008 alone, these distortions amounted to $6.75 billion at the national level, draining funds from other government services many of which have been shown to keep Canadians healthier and so reduce their demand for health care. Simply put, when Canadians are clear about the true cost of health care they more effectively play the traditional role of consumers by guarding against waste and inefficiency and so contribute to a more efficient and effective publicly-funded health care system.
url https://www.policyschool.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/r-kneebone-althealthpayfinal.pdf
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