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[Healthcare expenditures growth: the red herring of demographic ageing?]. | LitMetric

[Healthcare expenditures growth: the red herring of demographic ageing?].

Med Sci (Paris)

Paris-Jourdan Sciences Économiques(UMR 8545), École d'économie de Paris et École normale supérieure, 48, boulevard Jourdan, 75014 Paris, France.

Published: February 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • Demographic ageing is commonly blamed for rising health expenditures in developed countries, especially as the elderly typically use more medical services.
  • However, this perspective is misleading because healthcare consumption is influenced by various factors beyond just age, which have changed significantly over recent decades.
  • Research highlights that advancements in medical technology are a key driver of increased healthcare costs, suggesting that policymakers should focus on broader non-demographic factors affecting healthcare systems.

Article Abstract

Demographic ageing is often deemed responsible for the massive increase in health expenditures experienced by developed countries. As the elderly consume more medical care than the rest of the population, how could the increase in the share of the 60 + not lead to a marked expansion of healthcare public and private budgets? Despite its apparent logics, such reasoning is fallacious: it ignores that medical care consumption depends on many factors beyond age, which have tremendously evolved in the last decades and may change again in the future. Based on French stylized facts, this article provides an overview of the international literature that aimed at disentangling the respective roles of population ageing and of the non-demographic factors in explaining the dynamics of health expenditures. Paradoxically, technical medical progress has been a major contributor to the increase of healthcare spending. Results from economics research lead to qualify the impact of demographic trends and call for more attention to the public policies decisions that shape healthcare systems.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/medsci/20163202015DOI Listing

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