The
question is whether it is permanent or temporary
By Livio Di
Matteo
Expert Advisor EvidenceNetwork.ca
THUNDER BAY, ON/ Troy
Media/ - In the wake of new health expenditure data from the Canadian Institute
for Health Information (CIHI), the evidence continues to mount that Canadian
public health expenditure growth is moderating.
Moreover, adjusting
for inflation and population growth, per capita provincial and territorial
government health expenditures have actually declined since their peak in 2010.
From a high of $3,915 (2012 dollars), real provincial and territorial government
health spending per capita has declined by 3.9 per cent to reach an estimated
$3,762.
This decline,
however, is not evenly distributed across health expenditure categories or
jurisdictions. When health expenditure categories are examined, the largest drop
in real per capita provincial/territorial government health spending is for
capital spending, with a drop of 28 per cent since 2010. Capital spending
represents an easy target for government restraint, given that postponing
capital projects, such as new buildings or diagnostic equipment, often does not
have an immediate impact on service delivery.
Next largest is real
per capita drug spending, dropping 11.3 per cent, which is remarkable given drug
spending was once one of the fastest growing components of provincial government
health spending. According to CIHI, drug expenditure has been affected by
jurisdictions introducing generic pricing controls combined with patent
expirations and fewer new drug introductions.
Smaller declines are
in the areas of hospital and other institutional spending and administration.
However, physicians, other professionals and public health appear to have
escaped the decline. Real per capita physician spending is up 3.0 per cent since
2010 while spending on other professionals is up 12.5 per cent and public health
spending rose one third of one per cent.
Situations also vary
across the provinces and territories when it comes to health spending change,
reflecting the diversity of the federation. Eight out of 10 provinces and two of
the three territories saw declines in real per capita government health
spending. The percentage change in real per capita government health spending
since 2010 ranges from declines of nearly 7 per cent each in Alberta and Ontario
and 5 per cent in New Brunswick, to increases of 0.5 in British Columbia, 3 in
Nova Scotia and 7 per cent in the Northwest Territories. This diversity may be a
function of differential rates of population aging and population growth as well
as underlying economic performance and its effects on own source government
revenues.
The healthcare cost
curve is being bent in a manner not seen since 1992 to 1996 when real per capita
provincial and territorial government spending dropped nearly 8 per cent. This
decline followed a severe recession and fiscal restraint in the face of mounting
deficits that was augmented by reductions in federal cash transfers for health
with the introduction of the Canada Health and Social Transfer. A key difference
today is that federal health transfers continue to rise though their rate of
growth will decline after 2017.
The key question is
whether the current decline represents a permanent bending of the healthcare
cost curve or a temporary pause. In the wake of the spending decline from 1992
to 1996, real per capita government health spending grew as the economy
recovered and federal transfers enriched after the 2004 Health Accord. Indeed,
real per capita provincial and territorial government spending grew 50 per cent
between 1996 and 2010.
A similar rebound is
unlikely this time. Starting in 2017, the growth of federal health transfers
will be linked to the national rate of economic growth and inflation with a
floor of 3 per cent. Governments are likely implementing cost-control measures
in advance of the day when federal transfer growth slows from the annual 6 per
cent increases of the Health Accord.
However, the effort
to restrain health expenditure costs given slower growth in both the economy and
federal transfers will be counter-balanced by the aging of the population and
continued medical product innovation. While there has been a slowdown in drug
innovation that has affected the growth of drug spending, this may change. As
well, though aging has been a modest contributor to health spending growth to
date, this may not continue.
The Canadian
population is aging but the front end of the baby boom bulge is just entering
the age 65 to 69 category. Per capita provincial/territorial health spending in
2012 was $4,620 for those aged 60 to 64 and $16,231 for those aged 80 to 84. The
effects of aging are not fully upon us yet. As a result, real per capita
provincial government health spending will eventually resume growth but probably
at a lower rate than that which characterized the period 1996 to
2010.
Livio Di Matteo is
an expert advisor with EvidenceNetwork.ca and a Professor of Economics at
Lakehead University. |
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Friday, November 28, 2014
Healthcare spending in Canada declining
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