Does Decentralization Matter in Health Outcomes? Evidence from 22 OECD Unbalanced Panel Data for 1995-2005

Recently, scholars and practitioners around the globe have started to view decentralization as an integral part of broader health reforms. Nevertheless, the literature on decentralization has tended toward case studies and theoretical discussions rather than rigorous empirical analysis, and few quan...

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Published inInternational review of public administration Vol. 17; no. 1; pp. 1 - 32
Main Authors Kang, Youngju, Cho, Wonhyuk, Jung, Kwangho
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Seoul Routledge 01.04.2012
Taylor & Francis Ltd
한국행정학회
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ISSN1229-4659
2331-7795
2331-7795
DOI10.1080/12264431.2012.10805215

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Summary:Recently, scholars and practitioners around the globe have started to view decentralization as an integral part of broader health reforms. Nevertheless, the literature on decentralization has tended toward case studies and theoretical discussions rather than rigorous empirical analysis, and few quantitative studies have explored the practical consequences of decentralization of health service delivery. This study attempts to address this issue by exploring the impact of decentralization on health outcomes with a panel dataset of 22 countries from 1990 to 2005. Our findings indicate healthcare decentralization is nonlinearly beneficial to improve the health of a population. The effect of decentralization on population health remains positive within a certain threshold, but becomes negative beyond the transition point. Considering the institutional background of healthcare, the institutional setting of reliance on market mechanisms in service provision and on private insurance for basic coverage is a precondition for decentralization reform to further create a positive impact.
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G704-000299.2012.17.1.007
ISSN:1229-4659
2331-7795
2331-7795
DOI:10.1080/12264431.2012.10805215