Thomas Rice , Karsten Vrangbæk , Ingrid S. Saunes , Nicolas Bouckaert , Lucie Bryndová , Fidelia Cascini , Andres Võrk , Antoniya Dimova , Ewa Kocot , Liubove Murauskiene , Damien Bricard , Miriam Blumel , Péter Gaál , Peter Pažitný
{"title":"为医疗保健领域的公共资金征收税款能否循序渐进?对 29 个国家的评估","authors":"Thomas Rice , Karsten Vrangbæk , Ingrid S. Saunes , Nicolas Bouckaert , Lucie Bryndová , Fidelia Cascini , Andres Võrk , Antoniya Dimova , Ewa Kocot , Liubove Murauskiene , Damien Bricard , Miriam Blumel , Péter Gaál , Peter Pažitný","doi":"10.1016/j.healthpol.2024.105147","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<div><p>Most research on health care equity focuses on accessing services, with less attention given to how revenue is collected to pay for a country's health care bill. This article examines the progressivity of revenue collection among publicly funded sources: income taxes, social insurance (often in the form of payroll) taxes, and consumption taxes (e.g., value-added taxes). We develop methodology to derive a qualitative index that rates each of 29 high-income countries as to its progressivity or regressivity for each of the three sources of revenue. A variety of data sources are employed, some from secondary data sources and other from country representatives of the Health Systems and Policy Monitor of the European Observatory on Health Systems and Policies. We found that countries with more progressive income tax systems used more income-based tax brackets and had larger differences in marginal tax rates between the brackets. The more progressive social insurance revenue collection systems did not have an upper income cap and exempted poorer persons or reduced their contributions. The only pattern regarding consumption taxes was that countries that exhibited the fewest overall income inequalities tended to have least regressive consumption tax policies. The article also provides several examples from the sample of countries on ways to make public revenue financing of health care more progressive.</p></div>","PeriodicalId":55067,"journal":{"name":"Health Policy","volume":"148 ","pages":"Article 105147"},"PeriodicalIF":3.6000,"publicationDate":"2024-08-10","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Can revenue collection for public funding in health care be progressive? An assessment of 29 Countries\",\"authors\":\"Thomas Rice , Karsten Vrangbæk , Ingrid S. 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A variety of data sources are employed, some from secondary data sources and other from country representatives of the Health Systems and Policy Monitor of the European Observatory on Health Systems and Policies. We found that countries with more progressive income tax systems used more income-based tax brackets and had larger differences in marginal tax rates between the brackets. The more progressive social insurance revenue collection systems did not have an upper income cap and exempted poorer persons or reduced their contributions. The only pattern regarding consumption taxes was that countries that exhibited the fewest overall income inequalities tended to have least regressive consumption tax policies. 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Can revenue collection for public funding in health care be progressive? An assessment of 29 Countries
Most research on health care equity focuses on accessing services, with less attention given to how revenue is collected to pay for a country's health care bill. This article examines the progressivity of revenue collection among publicly funded sources: income taxes, social insurance (often in the form of payroll) taxes, and consumption taxes (e.g., value-added taxes). We develop methodology to derive a qualitative index that rates each of 29 high-income countries as to its progressivity or regressivity for each of the three sources of revenue. A variety of data sources are employed, some from secondary data sources and other from country representatives of the Health Systems and Policy Monitor of the European Observatory on Health Systems and Policies. We found that countries with more progressive income tax systems used more income-based tax brackets and had larger differences in marginal tax rates between the brackets. The more progressive social insurance revenue collection systems did not have an upper income cap and exempted poorer persons or reduced their contributions. The only pattern regarding consumption taxes was that countries that exhibited the fewest overall income inequalities tended to have least regressive consumption tax policies. The article also provides several examples from the sample of countries on ways to make public revenue financing of health care more progressive.
期刊介绍:
Health Policy is intended to be a vehicle for the exploration and discussion of health policy and health system issues and is aimed in particular at enhancing communication between health policy and system researchers, legislators, decision-makers and professionals concerned with developing, implementing, and analysing health policy, health systems and health care reforms, primarily in high-income countries outside the U.S.A.