Brisbane (Australia) - Public healthcare is more efficient than private
healthcare reveals a new study by Public Services International (PSI) exploding
the myth that user fees and privatisation will fix stretched health budgets.
The research “Financing
healthcare: False Profits and the Public Good", by Jane Lethbridge
of Public Services
International Research Unit (PSIRU),
University of Greenwich was released on Thursday 13 November at the Australian Nursing
and Midwifery Federation
(ANMF) Forum: When profits come
first – The true impacts of health privatisation.
“After almost thirty years of privatisation in
the healthcare sector the evidence shows that claims of private sector
efficiency are a dangerous myth,” said Daniel Bertossa, Director of Policy at
PSI.
Mr Bertossa explained that the reasons for the
efficiency and effectiveness of the public provision of health are not complex
“Administrative costs are routinely and
dramatically lower due to economies of scale and public systems are better able
to control costs by controlling over-servicing and ensuring the most
appropriate form of treatment” he said.
Several studies show that the incentive
structure in private systems distort the types of treatments provided towards
those that are more profitable for the provider even where they are less
appropriate and more costly.
Private providers also pay more to borrow,
defying the cliché that they bring more and cheaper financing to healthcare.
Tragically, the effects of out-of-pocket costs
cause untold hardship. Surveys in 89 countries, both high and low income,
covering 89% of the world’s population suggest that 150 million people globally
suffer financial ruin annually because they have to pay for health services.
Attempts to supplement public systems with
private providers fared no better. The ensuing two-tiered system tends to
starve the public system and slide towards the inefficiencies of a
substantially private system.
Mr Bertossa is in Australia to call on the G20
Leaders to meet their promise to stop multinational corporations from dodging
hundreds of billions of dollars each year. “If multinational companies paid their fair
share in tax we could easily fund quality public healthcare for all,” said Mr
Bertossa. The G20 has asked the OECD to review the rules
on multinational corporate taxation and will receive a report on progress at
the G20 leaders’ summit.
According to Mr Bertossa, these rules have not
seen significant review in almost 80 years, in which time multinational
corporations have developed a wide range of ways to avoid tax.
“It is a scandal that working people are asked
to pay more taxes and fees and receive lower quality public services when $20
trillion is held in tax havens out of the reach of governments” he explained.
For more information, please contact: Daniel
Bertossa, PSI Director of Policy and Governance: daniel.bertossa@world.org – Tel: +
33617462552