Author:
Richardson Jeff R J,Segal Leonie
Abstract
The cost to government of the Pharmaceutical
Benefits Scheme (PBS) is rising at over 10 percent
per annum. The government subsidy to
Private Health Insurance (PHI) is about $2.4
billion and rising. Despite this, the queues facing
public patients ? which were the primary justification
for the assistance to PHI ? do not appear to
be shortening.
Against this backdrop, we seek to evaluate recent
policies. It is shown that the reason commonly
given for the support of PHI ? the need to
preserve the market share of private hospitals and
relieve pressure upon public hospitals ? is based
upon a factually incorrect analysis of the hospital
sector in the last decade. It is similarly true that
the ?problem? of rising pharmaceutical expenditures
has been exaggerated. The common element
in both sets of policies is that they result in
cost shifting from the public to the private purse
and have little to do with the quality or quantity of
health services.
Cited by
4 articles.
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