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Assessing progressivity of out-of-pocket payment: with illustration to Malaysia

Assessing progressivity of out-of-pocket payment: with illustration to Malaysia
Assessing progressivity of out-of-pocket payment: with illustration to Malaysia

Throughout the world, policy makers are considering or implementing financing strategies that are likely to have a substantial impact on the equity of health financing. The assessment of the equity implication is clearly important, given the potential impact that alternative finance sources have on households. Households incur out-of-pocket payment directly from their budget, apart from their public or private insurance. Out-of-pocket payment is the primary concern, given their undesirable impact on households. Progressivity measures departures from proportionality in the relationship between out-of-pocket payment and ability to pay. It is the most frequently used yardstick to assess the equity of out-of-pocket payments in empirical studies. This paper provides an evaluation of such progressivity measures, undertaken using four approaches (proportion approach, tabulation approach, concentration curve and Kakwani's index), in order to reveal their usefulness and underlying notion. It is illustrated empirically with data on out-of-pocket payment for health care in Malaysia for 1998/ 1999, based on the nationally representative Household Expenditure Survey. Results indicate that out-of-pocket payments are mildly progressive, whilst the four approaches have their benefits and limitations in assessing equity implications. This analysis is of interest from a policy perspective, given Malaysia's heavy reliance on out-of-pocket payments to finance health care.

Cost Sharing/statistics & numerical data, Financing, Personal/statistics & numerical data, Health Care Surveys, Health Expenditures/statistics & numerical data, Health Policy/trends, Humans, Malaysia, Social Class
0749-6753
193-210
Yu, Chai Ping
f0572cc8-2bb4-42ab-a43a-820814551693
Whynes, David K
0f347f72-ed96-449b-8a76-40bc42dc283e
Sach, Tracey H
5c09256f-ebed-4d14-853a-181f6c92d6f2
Yu, Chai Ping
f0572cc8-2bb4-42ab-a43a-820814551693
Whynes, David K
0f347f72-ed96-449b-8a76-40bc42dc283e
Sach, Tracey H
5c09256f-ebed-4d14-853a-181f6c92d6f2

Yu, Chai Ping, Whynes, David K and Sach, Tracey H (2006) Assessing progressivity of out-of-pocket payment: with illustration to Malaysia. The International journal of health planning and management, 21 (3), 193-210. (doi:10.1002/hpm.845).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Throughout the world, policy makers are considering or implementing financing strategies that are likely to have a substantial impact on the equity of health financing. The assessment of the equity implication is clearly important, given the potential impact that alternative finance sources have on households. Households incur out-of-pocket payment directly from their budget, apart from their public or private insurance. Out-of-pocket payment is the primary concern, given their undesirable impact on households. Progressivity measures departures from proportionality in the relationship between out-of-pocket payment and ability to pay. It is the most frequently used yardstick to assess the equity of out-of-pocket payments in empirical studies. This paper provides an evaluation of such progressivity measures, undertaken using four approaches (proportion approach, tabulation approach, concentration curve and Kakwani's index), in order to reveal their usefulness and underlying notion. It is illustrated empirically with data on out-of-pocket payment for health care in Malaysia for 1998/ 1999, based on the nationally representative Household Expenditure Survey. Results indicate that out-of-pocket payments are mildly progressive, whilst the four approaches have their benefits and limitations in assessing equity implications. This analysis is of interest from a policy perspective, given Malaysia's heavy reliance on out-of-pocket payments to finance health care.

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More information

Published date: 24 August 2006
Keywords: Cost Sharing/statistics & numerical data, Financing, Personal/statistics & numerical data, Health Care Surveys, Health Expenditures/statistics & numerical data, Health Policy/trends, Humans, Malaysia, Social Class

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 479740
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/479740
ISSN: 0749-6753
PURE UUID: bed32d12-3441-4298-80b7-cff9cfd2f5d6
ORCID for Tracey H Sach: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8098-9220

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Date deposited: 26 Jul 2023 16:55
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:20

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Contributors

Author: Chai Ping Yu
Author: David K Whynes
Author: Tracey H Sach ORCID iD

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