Introduction

The NHS is experiencing one of the toughest periods in its history. The COVID-19 pandemic brought a huge additional strain on a health system that was already struggling to meet demand with the resources available to it. The enormity of the challenges facing the NHS, which include growing waiting hospital lists and rising pressure on GP services, has led to a resurgence of appeals from some politicians and sections of the media to change the way the NHS is funded. These include calls for increasing user charges, for example introducing charges for GP appointments, in the hope that it might moderate demand and raise revenue, and claims that switching to a social health insurance (SHI) system would generate more resources or deliver better results.,,

A century ago, health care was insurance-based in all European countries. Access to health care and sickness pay was tightly linked to contributions that workers and their employers made to insurance funds. Health care was therefore only available to those in employment, provided by myriad social insurance schemes, which were generally not-for-profit, self-governing and had a social rather than commercial identity. Separate insurance schemes covered different professional groups, but generally excluded dependants and unemployed people. Germany was the first nation to use the authority of the state to mandate blue-collar employers and employees to contribute to insurance schemes in 1883 (under Bismarck), which was gradually extended to all working and non-working people over the course of the following decades. Many European countries adopted this ‘Bismarckian’ model of SHI, attempting to balance the autonomy and independence of insurance bodies with the oversight of central government as health systems grew more expensive. In 1948, the UK abolished insurance funds and took over the collection and distribution of funds via the tax system. Countries in Scandinavia and southern Europe adopted this model, which was dubbed ‘Beveridgian’, while similar systems emerged further afield, for example in New Zealand in 1938.

In practice, these two models – SHI and tax-based – are no longer distinct, as nearly all countries with SHI have diversified their source of revenue-raising, for example using taxation to transfer additional revenues into social insurance schemes to cover unemployed people or pensioners. In any case, all forms of health financing models in Europe have evolved to have a similar function in order to cover all residents: compelling financial contributions from individuals and employers (whether via tax or insurance contributions), and pooling funds to even out the financial risks of treating illness across populations. The World Health Organization (WHO) recently concluded that ‘conventional distinctions between SHI and tax-financed schemes are no longer meaningful’.

But there are still major differences in how European countries raise revenue to pay for health care, shaped by the history, culture and institutional contexts specific to each nation. A recent survey of SHI systems in western Europe described social insurance as the culmination of a ‘700-year historical process’ with its roots in mutual guilds in medieval Europe. Nations have different attitudes towards welfare, the role of central government in providing health care and the degree of political autonomy that regions should have in relation to central government. And there are variations in what choices people have (and expect) over which services they can use, who handles their contributions and how much they pay upfront to use services.

This report explores these differences to inform debate about the merits and drawbacks of the way the NHS is funded compared with other countries. The first section briefly describes how health care revenue is raised in seven European countries, including the UK. The second section sets out a number of themes from our analysis of how these health systems have reformed their funding arrangements in recent decades, to shed light on some of the challenges associated with different funding models.

We do not intend to answer the question of whether one system is ‘better’ than others in terms of producing higher-quality or more efficient services. Attempts to answer this question have found no strong evidence that one system performs better than another (Box 1).,,,

Box 1: Does either system lead to better health outcomes?

There is no strong evidence linking any particular funding model, whether SHI- or tax-based, to better health outcomes. In 2009, the World Bank analysed the relationship between the funding systems of 29 countries of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) and mortality from nine causes considered to be ‘amenable’ to better health care. The analysis found that there was no evidence that SHI systems had lower levels of amenable mortality than tax-based systems.

In 2010, the OECD published an analysis of 29 countries, exploring whether variations in outcomes (such as life expectancy) were related to institutional characteristics. These included funding systems, but also other characteristics, for example the degree of public or private ownership of provision, use of market mechanisms, freedom of choice for patients and so on. These institutional features were drawn from a bespoke survey of OECD countries, and were used to create six different groupings of countries, which shared strong similarities. The analysis found that ‘no broad type of health care system performs systematically better than another in improving population health in a systematic manner’.

A more recent analysis, aimed at policymakers in low- and middle-income countries, compared countries that had transitioned from an out-of-pocket spending model as their main funding model to a predominantly SHI, or government-funded, system, to see if one model produced better outcomes. Outcomes included immunisation rates, life expectancy, child mortality and maternity mortality. The study found that SHI systems did not provide significantly better outcomes than government-funded systems for any of the outcomes chosen. It should be noted that very few countries transition from SHI to government-funded systems or vice versa.

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