Publications

2018 Current Health Expenditures and National Health Accounts in Korea

Title
2018 Current Health Expenditures and National Health Accounts in Korea
Author(s)

정형선 ; 신정우 ; 문성웅 ; 최지숙 ; 김희년

Keyword
2018 Health Accounts ; System of Health Accounts(SHA) ; SHA2011 ; Current Health Expenditure(CHE) ; Public-private mix
Publication Year
2019-06-30
Publisher
보건행정학회
Citation
보건행정학회지, vol. 29, no. 2, pp. 206 - 219
Abstract
This paper aims to demonstrate current health expenditure (CHE) and National Health Accounts of the years 2018 constructed according to the SHA2011, which is a manual for System of Health Accounts (SHA) that was published jointly by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), Eurostat, and World Health Organization in 2011. Comparison is made with international trends by collecting and analyzing health accounts of OECD member countries. Particularly, scale and trends of the total CHE financing as well as public-private mix are parsed in depth. In the case of private financing, estimation of total expenditures for (revenues by) provider groups (HP) is made from both survey on the benefit coverage rate of National Health Insurance (by National Health Insurance Service) and Economic Census and Service Industry Census (by National Statistical Office); and other pieces of information from Korean Health Panel Study, etc. are supplementarily used to allocate those totals into functional classifications. CHE was 144.4 trillion won in 2018, which accounts for 8.1% of Korea’s gross domestic product (GDP). It was a big increase of 12.8 trillion won, or 9.7%, from the previous year. GDP share of Korean CHE has already been close to the average of OECD member countries. Government and compulsory schemes’ share (or public share), 59.8% of the CHE in 2018, is much lower than the OECD average of 73.6%. ‘Transfers from government domestic revenue’ share of total revenue of health financing was 16.9% in Korea, lower than the other social insurance countries. When it comes to ‘compulsory contributory health financing schemes,’ ‘transfers from government domestic revenue’ share of 13.5% was again much lower compared to Japan (43.0%) and Belgium (30.1%) with social insurance scheme
Fulltext
https://doi.org/10.4332/KJHPA.2019.29.2.206
ISSN
1225-4266
DOI
10.4332/KJHPA.2019.29.2.206
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