wow-inequalities/02-data/intermediate/wos_sample/eb29a4d0ab0b841c767ac9d4c541ec9e-pena-sanchez-antoni/info.yaml

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abstract: 'The general objective of this work is to study the level of
socio-economic development of an economy as an explanatory factor for
public health expenditure. To do so, this general objective will be
broken down into three specific ones: firstly, the Spanish position in
terms of health expenditure in the countries of the Economic and
Monetary Union as a whole will be studied; secondly, the relationship
between public health expenditure per capita and GDP per capita will be
analysed; and thirdly, the level of convergence experienced by public
health expenditure at a regional level in the Spanish economy will be
studied.
This analysis allows us to observe whether territorial public spending
has evolved in a similar way in all Spanish regions, placing the
country''s inhabitants in the same situation in this respect, or if, on
the contrary, the evolution of health spending has been more unequal in
the period analysed. This would show whether disparities in health
expenditure are occurring between people living in the same country,
according to the region in which they reside, establishing a pattern
which allows us to distinguish whether health expenditure is and has
been greater in regions with a higher socio-economic level or the
opposite. In this way, it will be possible to define the level of
socio-economic development (measured by the GDP per capita) as a
determining factor of health expenditure per capita in all the Spanish
regions in the period analysed (in principle 2000-2018), since it covers
the last two decades and there is sufficient data to carry out a serious
and rigorous study.
The availability of databases on health expenditure implies that several
statistical sources can be used. The aim of this research was to have a
variety of statistical sources to enable a sufficiently long period of
time to be covered for the study to be focused on structural issues, and
not just on purely conjunctural aspects. This undoubtedly favours the
achievement of more rigorous and timely reflections in studies of this
type.
The statistical sources used in this paper are as follows: Satellite
Accounts on Public Health Expenditure (Ministry of Health, Consumption
and Social Welfare of the Government of Spain); Satellite Accounts on
Public Health Expenditure (Spanish Regional Accounts of the National
Statistics Institute); Data on Health, Dependency and Pensions
(Foundation for Applied Economic Studies); Public Health Expenditure
(Valencian Institute of Economic Research); General State Budgets
General Intervention of the State Administration (Ministry of Finance of
the Government of Spain); and Health Accounts System (Ministry of
Health, Consumption and Social Welfare of the Government of Spain); and
Macroeconomic Data (Expansion Edition).
With regard to the methodology used to address the proposed objectives,
in addition to the description of the data presented, based on a
territorial approach, the evolution of these variables and the possible
relationship between them will be analysed, based on the correlation
between them. Furthermore, an attempt has been made to establish the
link between territorial economic development and the level of regional
health expenditure by means of an econometric estimate. Similarly,
another attempt will be made to measure the evolution of existing
territorial disparities on the basis of indicators such as sigma
convergence, beta convergence, the Theil index, and other indices that
will make it possible to examine whether regional differences have been
reduced or, on the contrary, intensified in the period analysed.
An analysis of the evolution of public health expenditure per inhabitant
and its link with the level of socio-economic development of the Spanish
regions shows that the levels of public health expenditure per capita
and socio-economic development are closely linked in these regions. The
conclusions drawn from the study are presented below.
Public health expenditure is an aspect that has a relevant influence on
the whole population, so it guarantees equal opportunities and its
distribution undoubtedly allows for social and territorial cohesion. In
general, the public administrations of the countries with the highest
level of income in the Economic and Monetary Union tend to make a
greater effort to invest in public health, which may reflect the fact
that health expenditure is closely linked to the level of economic
development of the countries. Public health expenditure in Spain has
accounted for around 70\% of total public expenditure over the period
analysed, and is, therefore, an element that can be used by territorial
public administrations to try to stimulate the equalisation of
opportunities for the population in each of the Autonomous Communities,
as well as to promote the socio-economic cohesion of the Spanish
regions. The distribution of public health expenditure among the Spanish
geographical areas has been closely related to the territorial
distribution of the population in the period analysed, but there are
still strong regional differences in public health expenditure per
inhabitant, which makes it somewhat difficult to achieve socio-economic
equality among the Spanish Autonomous Communities.
Furthermore, the growth of public health expenditure has been more
positive than that of the Gross Domestic Product in the Spanish economy
in the period studied, which has meant that public health expenditure
per GDP has advanced positively not only at a national level, but also
in all Spanish regions. However, it is necessary to point out that the
intensity of growth at a regional level has not been equitable, but
rather has been very uneven.
It is also noted that the level of economic development is a determining
factor in public health expenditure per capita. Logically, this has a
fundamental impact on the process of territorial cohesion and equal
opportunities that the Spanish economy is seeking. Regional disparities
in public health expenditure per inhabitant have increased in the period
1995-2017 in the Spanish economy, as shown by the sigma convergence
indicator, the Theil index and the applied inequality index. The
breakdown of the Theil index shows how the increase in territorial
differences in public health expenditure has been due to an increase of
almost 30\% in the regional investment effort in public health
expenditure per GDP and almost 70\% in the level of economic development
of the Spanish regions. Moreover, according to the indicator of
contribution to inequality, the regions with the highest share of
inequality are Andalusia, the Basque Country and Madrid.
The study shows that it would be desirable to reduce the range of
dispersion between regions in the level of public health expenditure per
inhabitant. Moreover, it is essential to identify the determinants of
these interregional differences since they are a real obstacle to
guarantee equal opportunities in the access to this type of services and
to achieve higher levels of welfare in the population. Furthermore, it
is crucial to establish a system that adequately protects the public
health services provided by the territorial administrations in the face
of the economic crisis and the fall in public revenue experienced in
Spain over the last decade.
Four key issues for the future are considered necessary: a) the
sustainability of public health expenditure requires medium and
long-term financial planning that is prudent and complemented by
predictable funds provided in years of economic prosperity; b) the high
territorial disparities in public health expenditure need to be
carefully monitored and reviewed as they call into question equal
opportunities policies; c) institutional loyalty must be adequately
promoted so that territorial public administrations share the priority
of these policies and can provide them with the corresponding funds; in
this sense, a serious and rigorous debate on the level of sustainable
public health expenditure must be addressed as soon as possible, taking
into account the restrictions established by the high public deficit and
the high public debt of the Spanish economy; and d) the regional
financing systems must be adapted to the constitutional commitments to
inter-territorial equity.
In any case, it is suggested to maintain the economic growth that allows
contracting the economic disparities of the Spanish regions, in order to
reduce the current differences in the public health expenditure per
inhabitant.'
affiliation: 'Sanchez, ARP (Corresponding Author), Univ Cadiz, Cadiz, Spain.
Pena Sanchez, Antonio Rafael; Jimenez Garcia, Mercedes; Ruiz Chico, Jose, Univ Cadiz,
Cadiz, Spain.'
author: Pena Sanchez, Antonio Rafael and Jimenez Garcia, Mercedes and Ruiz Chico,
Jose
author_list:
- family: Pena Sanchez
given: Antonio Rafael
- family: Jimenez Garcia
given: Mercedes
- family: Ruiz Chico
given: Jose
da: '2023-09-28'
files: []
issn: 0213-7585
journal: REVISTA DE ESTUDIOS REGIONALES
keywords: 'Pubic health expenditure; Level of economic development; Sigma
convergence; Theil index; Regional analysis'
keywords-plus: CARE EXPENDITURE; GROWTH; SPAIN; DETERMINANTS; CONVERGENCE
language: Spanish
month: MAY-AUG
number: '124'
number-of-cited-references: '83'
pages: 157-199
papis_id: 0474f7c1841f85bc6fff43850d24adec
ref: Penasanchez2022publicspending
times-cited: '0'
title: 'Public spending in health and socio-economic development in the Spanish Regions:
Evolution of disparities in last decades'
type: article
unique-id: WOS:000885976800006
usage-count-last-180-days: '1'
usage-count-since-2013: '2'
web-of-science-categories: Environmental Studies
year: '2022'