老龄化与卫生保健支出:一个非参数方法

Normann Lorenz, P. Ihle, F. Breyer
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引用次数: 9

摘要

卫生经济学中最重要的争议之一是,大多数经合组织国家迫在眉睫的人口老龄化是否会给资助公共卫生保健系统的纳税人带来额外负担。“红鲱鱼假说”的支持者认为,事实并非如此,因为年龄和医疗保健支出(HCE)之间的大部分相关性是由于死亡率随着年龄的增长而上升,而HCE在死亡前的最后几年急剧上升。然而,关于这一假设的证据是混杂的。我们对这场争论的贡献主要是方法论上的:我们认为年龄、死亡时间(TTD)和HCE之间的关系应该是非参数化的估计。使用来自德国法定健康保险的大型面板数据集,我们首先表明参数化方法高估了高年龄阶层的支出,从而高估了老龄化导致的未来HCE的增加。其次,我们表明,一旦考虑到TTD,非参数方法对于回答年龄是否仍然对HCE有影响的问题特别有用,并发现情况显然如此。这种关系在长期护理支出(LTCE)中更为明显。然后,我们表明年龄-支出关系随着时间的推移并不稳定:对于许多年龄组,生命最后一年的HCE增长速度明显快于幸存者的HCE。我们探讨了这些发现对未来HCE模拟的影响,并发现人口老龄化实际上会导致未来几十年HCE的上升。我们还发现,统计处提供的不同人口预测对这些模拟的影响比以前承认的更大。然而,人口统计对未来HCE和LTCE的总体影响与外生时间趋势相比相形见绌,外生时间趋势是由于医疗进步和公共LTC保险的日益慷慨。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Aging and Health Care Expenditures: A Non-Parametric Approach
One of the most important controversies in health economics concerns the question whether the imminent aging of the population in most OECD countries will place an additional burden on the tax payers who finance public health care systems. Proponents of the “red-herring hypothesis” argue that this is not the case because most of the correlation of age and health care expenditures (HCE) is due to the fact that the mortality rate rises with age and HCE rise steeply in the last years before death. The evidence regarding this hypothesis is, however, mixed. Our contribution to this debate is mainly methodological: We argue that the relationship of age, time to death (TTD) and HCE should be estimated non-parametrically. Using a large panel data set from the German Statutory Health Insurance, we first show that the parametric approach overestimates the expenditures of the high age classes and thus overstates the increase of future HCE due to aging. Secondly, we show that the non-parametric approach is particularly useful to answer the question whether age still has an impact on HCE once TTD is taken into account and find that it is clearly the case. This relationship is even more pronounced for long-term care expenditures (LTCE). We then show that the age-expenditure relationship is not stable over time: for many age classes, HCE in the last year of life grow considerably faster than HCE of survivors. We explore the impact of these findings on the simulation of future HCE and find that population aging will in fact contribute to rising HCE in the coming decades. We also find that the impact of different population projections provided by the statistical offices has a greater impact on these simulations than previously acknowledged. However, the total impact of demographics on future HCE and LTCE is dwarfed by the exogenous time trend, which is due to medical progress and increasing generosity of public LTC insurance.
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