Over the last five years, a succession of crises has strongly impacted the financial resources that countries were able and willing to allocate to health, and significant uncertainties continue to weigh on the global economy. As a result, restoring public finances has become a priority in many countries, with implications for health spending patterns. Health policy priorities are shifting towards identifying efficiency gains within health systems as a means of strengthening their resilience. This Health Working Paper summarises the latest health spending trends in OECD countries, highlighting that health spending growth in 2024 is still expected to have remained slightly above pre-pandemic growth reflecting the volatile economic growth patterns across countries in recent years. It also compares the latest trajectory of health spending with government expenditure in other areas, such as education, social protection or defense. Finally, drawing on budget information sourced for a limited number of countries, the paper discusses the likely short-term developments in health spending and provides examples of measures that countries have implemented to make their health spending more financially sustainable.
Latest health spending trends and outlook
Balancing resilience and sustainability in challenging times
Working paper
Share
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Abstract
In the same series
-
10 April 202641 Pages
-
Working paper
Lessons for Slovenia
22 January 202672 Pages -
Working paper16 January 202699 Pages
-
Working paper
An analysis of emergency department visits and hospitalisation data from 16 countries
17 December 202555 Pages -
Working paper
New indicators for benchmarking performance
10 December 202572 Pages -
Working paper
Insights into structures and solutions for public access and use
8 December 202557 Pages -
3 December 202563 Pages
Related publications
-
12 January 202638 Pages -
11 December 202576 Pages