Public Management of Health Expenditures in Response to COVID-19 and Traditional Infectious Diseases: The Korean Experience

IF 0.8 3区 社会学 Q1 AREA STUDIES
Seungwon Yu, Yeonwoo Sim, Namkuk Lee, Suhee Kim
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This study investigates the effectiveness, allocative efficiency, and crowding-out effects of health expenditures in response to traditional infectious diseases and the COVID-19 pandemic. Through theoretical analysis and empirical data from Korean local governments, employing a two-way fixed effects model, we derive several key findings. First, social insurance health expenditures were significantly effective in controlling both traditional infectious diseases and COVID-19, whereas general government health expenditures were not. Second, allocative efficiency, the principle of allocating more resources where needed, was not observed in the response to traditional infectious diseases but was significant in the COVID-19 response. Third, we identified a crowding-out effect where increased health expenditures for COVID-19 reduced funds for traditional infectious disease responses. These findings offer strategic insights for Asia-Pacific countries in optimising health resource allocation and budget management amidst evolving health crises.

Abstract Image

应对COVID-19和传统传染病的卫生支出公共管理:韩国经验
本研究探讨了应对传统传染病和COVID-19大流行的卫生支出的有效性、配置效率和挤出效应。通过理论分析和韩国地方政府的实证数据,采用双向固定效应模型,我们得出了几个关键发现。首先,社会保险卫生支出在控制传统传染病和COVID-19方面均显著有效,而政府一般卫生支出则没有显著效果。其次,在应对传统传染病的过程中,没有观察到分配更多资源的配置效率原则,但在应对COVID-19的过程中却很重要。第三,我们发现了挤出效应,即COVID-19卫生支出的增加减少了传统传染病应对的资金。这些发现为亚太国家在不断演变的卫生危机中优化卫生资源分配和预算管理提供了战略见解。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
5.30%
发文量
19
审稿时长
6 weeks
期刊介绍: Asia & the Pacific Policy Studies is the flagship journal of the Crawford School of Public Policy at The Australian National University. It is a peer-reviewed journal that targets research in policy studies in Australia, Asia and the Pacific, across a discipline focus that includes economics, political science, governance, development and the environment. Specific themes of recent interest include health and education, aid, migration, inequality, poverty reduction, energy, climate and the environment, food policy, public administration, the role of the private sector in public policy, trade, foreign policy, natural resource management and development policy. Papers on a range of topics that speak to various disciplines, the region and policy makers are encouraged. The goal of the journal is to break down barriers across disciplines, and generate policy impact. Submissions will be reviewed on the basis of content, policy relevance and readability.
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