Health Care Systems in Japan and the United States
Ryuzo Sato, Elias Grivoyannis, Barbara ByrneBooks.org participates in affiliate programs including Bookshop.org and the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program. We may earn a commission from qualifying purchases made through links on this page, at no additional cost to you.
Overview
Health Care Systems in Japan and the United States: A Simulation Study and Policy Analysis takes a macroeconomic policy approach to analyzing a fundamental question of the health care debate, namely, can the anticipated increasing rate of growth in future health care expenditures be financially absorbed by the society's increasing income and output? This monograph addresses not only if but also how health care financing could in the future be ethically, safety, and economically accomplished. It identifies the right questions which must be answered and the balance that must be sought among the dilemmas and paradoxes raised by the realities of financing health care services in the future.Synopsis
The health care sector has become a major component of the contemporary economies of Japan and the United States. It absorbs significant portions of the GDP in both countries, and places increasing stress on private, government, and corporate budgets. With so much at stake, arrangements for planning, financing, and operating health care service systems have become increasingly important economic and political issues. Health Care Systems in Japan and the United States takes a macroeconomic policy approach to analyzing a fundamental question of the health care debate, namely, can the anticipated increasing rate of growth in future health care expenditures be financially absorbed by the society's increasing income and output? This monograph addresses not only if but also how health care financing could in the future be ethically, safely, and economically accomplished. It identifies the right questions which must be answered and the balance that must be sought among the dilemmas and paradoxes raised by the realities of financing health care services in the future.
Booknews
Adopts a macroeconomic policy approach to analyzing whether the anticipated increasing rate of growth in future health care expenditures can be financially absorbed by the society's increasing income and output. Focusing on ethical, safe, and economically accomplished financing, contributors examine alternative scenarios of productivity rates of growth for the non-healthcare sectors of the Japanese and the U.S. economies and simulate the absorption process. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.