How does a high gross domestic product affect health care apex
Globalization and Health volume 16, Article number: 64 (2020) Cite this article Show
AbstractBackgroundAccelerated globalisation has substantially contributed to the rise of emerging markets worldwide. The G7 and Emerging Markets Seven (EM7) behaved in significantly different macroeconomic ways before, during, and after the 2008 Global Crisis. Average real GDP growth rates remained substantially higher among the EM7, while unemployment rates changed their patterns after the crisis. Since 2017, however, approximately one half of the worldwide economic growth is attributable to the EM7, and only a quarter to the G7. This paper aims to analyse the association between the health spending and real GDP growth in the G7 and the EM7 countries. ResultsIn terms of GDP growth, the EM7 exhibited a higher degree of resilience during the 2008 crisis, compared to the G7. Unemployment in the G7 nations was rising significantly, compared to pre-recession levels, but, in the EM7, it remained traditionally high. In the G7, the austerity (measured as a percentage of GDP) significantly decreased the public health expenditure, even more so than in the EM7. Out-of-pocket health expenditure grew at a far more concerning pace in the EM7 compared to the G7 during the crisis, exposing the vulnerability of households living close to the poverty line. Regression analysis demonstrated that, in the G7, real GDP growth had a positive impact on out-of-pocket expenditure, measured as a percentage of current health expenditure, expressed as a percentage of GDP (CHE). In the EM7, it negatively affected CHE, CHE per capita, and out-of-pocket expenditure per capita. ConclusionThe EM7 countries demonstrated stronger endurance, withstanding the consequences of the crisis as compared to the G7 economies. Evidence of this was most visible in real growth and unemployment rates, before, during and after the crisis. It influenced health spending patterns in both groups, although they tended to diverge instead of converge in several important areas. IntroductionAccelerated globalisation, taking place primarily after the end of the Cold War Era, has substantially contributed to creating conditions for the occurrence of rapidly developing large economies worldwide, labelled “emerging markets” [1]. World economy growth was generally quite stable from the beginning of the XXI century until the occurrence of the Global Financial Crisis triggered by the Lehman Brothers’ bankruptcy in the USA in autumn 2007. It had disastrous consequences both in the mature, high-income free market economies and in the rapidly growing major emerging economies. In this study, we observe the largest and most representative national economies in both groups. Therefore, the authors of this paper decided to elaborate further on the World Bank’s adopted comparison of real GDP growth rates and healthcare spending between the first group presented by the G7 nations and the second one marked as Emerging Markets Seven (EM7). The G7 became a formal group in 1976, before the oil crisis. The EM7 was observed as a group of similar economies by John Hawksworth and Gordon Cookson at PricewaterhouseCoopers in 2006, 30 years later [2]. These two groups behaved in significantly different macroeconomic ways before, during, and after the crisis. Average real GDP growth rates remained substantially higher among the EM7, while unemployment rates changed the pre-crisis pattern into a novel post-crisis one. Worldwide economic growth began to accelerate again in 2017 and continued in 2018–2019. However, approximately one half of this growth is attributable to the EM7 and only one quarter to the G7 nations. This gradual, but profound change in global health expenditure is largely attributable to financial globalisation and we seek to understand the underlying causality. Medical technology dissemination, from the rich industrialised Global North to the Global South, took place alongside manufacturing capacities migration, mostly over the past half century. Alongside increased living standards and rapid urbanisation, these changes led to an increased demand for medical goods and services, coupled with a strengthened supply, by both local providers and global multinationals. Big Pharma is a typical example, since innovative pharmaceuticals comprise a much higher share of health spending in low- and middle income countries and Asia, in comparison to the West. All of these gradual, but profound, evolutionary developments contributed to the growing purchasing power of both citizens and governments throughout the Third World nations, which led to their steadily growing share of global health spending. The purpose of this paper is to analyse the association between the health spending and real GDP growth in the G7 and the EM7 countries. Observing the 2000–2016 period is particularly useful to understand the ability of these emerging nations to invest into healthcare [3,4,5,6,7]. So far, the existing studies focused on certain countries only [8, 9]. There is a large body of seminal evidence focusing on understanding the mutual relationship between the overall pace of economic development and the healthcare attributable spending [10]. From a historical perspective, it was earlier discovered that periods of abundant prosperity created a wealth surplus that was largely allocated towards increasing human longevity and combat diseases [11]. Much later, the feedback loop between the population health and nation’s economic productivity was discovered [12]. Thus, the original perception of medical care, as a purely consumptive branch [13] of the economy, was replaced with the investment concept [14]. Higher health spending led to increased healthy life expectancy [15] and cost savings in the long run [16]. Today, a variety of contemporary health economic literature focuses on discovering the explanatory variables between the real Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth and the health spending dynamics among modern societies [17]. We seek to understand underlying hidden patterns and long-term trends in increasing national wealth allocated for medical care provision. Since the early 1990s, insufficient health expenditure has led to unacceptably high, out-of-pocket spending by ordinary citizens, gradually increasing, in terms of percentage of GDP [18]. Data and methodsFor the analysis, we used data provided by the Brookings Institute and the World Bank. The G7 included the USA, Japan, Germany, the UK, France, Italy, Canada, while the Emerging Seven Markets (EM7) encompassed China, India, Russia, Brazil, Indonesia, Mexico, and Turkey. The time period analysed was 2000–2016, although some data, within this period, was incomplete. Another data source used was the WHO Global Health Expenditure Database for the following indicators of health expenditure: Current health expenditure (CHE) as percentage of GDP, current health expenditure (CHE) per capita in USD constant 2010, current health expenditure (CHE) per capita in PPP (constant 2011 international USD), domestic general government health expenditure (GGHE-D) as percentage of current health expenditure (CHE), out-of-pocket Expenditure (OOPS) per capita in PPP International USD, out-of-pocket (OOPS) as percentage of current health expenditure (CHE). The International Monetary Fund (IMF) served as a further, complimentary data source for the following variables: GDP (nationwide in terms of million PPP) and real GDP growth rate (percentage). We utilised panel regression analysis with country- and year fixed effects, separately, for the G7 and the EM7 countries. We specified the basic model as follows: $$ {\boldsymbol{Y}}_{it}={\beta}_1\ast Real\ GDP\ {Growth}_{it}+{\boldsymbol{\beta} \boldsymbol{X}}_{it}+{\alpha}_i+{t}_t+{\varepsilon}_{it}, $$ where αi is an intercept for each country; tt is an intercept for each year; Yit was a vector of dependent variables (i is country, t is year), such as current health expenditure (CHE) as percentage of GDP (models 1–2), CHE per capita in US$ constant 2010 (models 3–4), CHE per capita in PPP in constant 2011 international USD (models 5–6), domestic general government health expenditure (GGHE-D) as percentage of CHE (models 7–8), out-of-pocket expenditure (OOPS) per capita in PPP international USD (models 9–10), OOPS as percentage of CHE (models 11–12); εit is the error term. Real GDP growth was an independent variable, while Xit was a vector of control variables, which included GDP per capita, inflation, unemployment, population density, and life expectancy. The last indicator was included as a proxy for the burden of all diseases [19]. In the extended model, we included governance effectiveness and the number of physicians per 1000 people. β1 is the coefficient for the independent variable, while β is a vector of the coefficients for the control variables. Regression analyses were performed using STATA software, version 14. ResultsPatterns analysis based on group’s averagesOver the 16 years (2000–2015), total GDP for both groups of nations grew significantly, while the EM7 grew at a much faster pace (Fig. 1). In early 2012, the EM7 GDP exceeded the G7’s. Both groups reacted to the global macroeconomic crisis in a similar way and economic activity and recovery went mostly in a diminishing, parallel manner. Before, during and after the crisis, the average real GDP growth rates of the EM7 economies were almost constantly twice as high as those of the G7 (Fig. 2). Unemployment rates were, on average, slightly lower among the G7 before the crisis (2000–2008) and somewhat higher among the G7 after the crisis (2009–2016) (Fig. 3). Fig. 1 Gross Domestic Product in million current PPP (constant 2011 international USD) in the G7 and the EM7 in 2000–2015. Source: IMF Full size image Fig. 2 Real GDP growth (Annual percent change) in the G7 and the EM7 in 2000–2017. Source: IMF Full size image Fig. 3 Unemployment rate (Percent) in the G7 and the EM7 in 2000–2017. Source: IMF Full size image These dynamic changes affected health spending in a non-linear and unpredictable way. We identified the following patterns. Current health expenditure (CHE, expressed as a percentage of GDP) was steadily growing in both groups (Fig. 4). However, it remained significantly higher among the G7 during the entire period. The average difference of 3.85 percentage points between the two groups, in 2000, increased to almost 6 percentage points in 2015. This is in clear contrast with the overall stronger GDP growth trend in the EM7, pointing at a lower priority of health investment among governments in emerging economies and a shifting of newly acquired national wealth towards other priority areas. In per capita PPP terms, upward trends are obvious, but strongly divergent in favour of the G7, following the changes noted above (Fig. 5). Fig. 4 Current Health Expenditure (CHE) as percentage of GDP in the G7 and the EM7 in 2000–2016. Source: WHO Global Health Expenditure Database Full size image Fig. 5 Current Health Expenditure (CHE) per Capita in PPP (current international USD) in the G7 and the EM7 in 2000–2016. Source: WHO Global Health Expenditure Database Full size image Domestic governmental health expenditure, expressed as a percentage of CHE, also exhibited a distinctive difference (Fig. 6). The G7 level was exceptionally stable at 72–74% with, essentially, no change at the group average level over the entire period. At the same time, the EM7 governmental share of spending rose from 35% in 2000 to 50% in 2015. There was a strong upward growth in the early 2000s and a sudden drop due to some governments’ austerity measures in reaction to the 2010 global crisis. Recovery to pre-crisis levels was already evident in 2011. Fig. 6 Domestic General Government Health Expenditure (GGHE-D) as a percentage Current Health Expenditure (CHE) in the G7 and the EM7 in 2000–2016. Source: WHO Global Health Expenditure Database Full size image Out-of-pocket health expenditure, expressed in USD PPP basis per capita, had more than doubled among the EM7, from $135 on average, in 2000, up to $298 in 2015 (Fig. 7). Among the G7, this increase was also substantial, jumping from $377 in 2000, to $666 in 2015. Out-of-pocket spending, observed as a percentage share of GDP, was surprisingly quite stable among the G7 (reducing from 15 to 14%), while it was downsizing among the EM7 nations from 46 to 39% (Fig. 8). Fig. 7 Out-of-Pocket Expenditure (OOPS) per Capita in PPP International USD in the G7 and the EM7 in 2000–2016. Source: WHO Global Health Expenditure Database Full size image Fig. 8 Out-of-Pocket (OOPS) as a percentage of Current Health Expenditure (CHE) in the G7 and the EM7 in 2000–2016, Source: WHO Global Health Expenditure Database Full size image Panel regression analysisInterestingly, real GDP growth affects different aspects of healthcare expenditure in the compared groups. In the G7 countries, real GDP growth had a positive, statistically and economically significant impact on out-of-pocket expenditure, expressed as a percentage of CHE only (see Table 1). In the EM7 countries, real GDP growth had a negative, statistically and economically significant effect on current health expenditure, expressed as a percentage of GDP, CHE per capita, in PPP in constant 2011 international USD, and out-of-pocket expenditure (OOPS) per capita in PPP international USD (see Table 2). The impact of other control variables was not systematic in both groups. Real GDP growth had a negative, statistically and economically significant effect only on current health expenditure, expressed as a percentage of GDP and CHE per capita in USD constant 2010. Tables 3 and 4 provide descriptive statistics and cross-correlation matrices for the variables for the G7 and the EM7 countries respectively. Tables 1 and 2 provide models estimates for the G7 and the EM7 countries respectively. Variance inflation factors from preliminary OLS regressions do not suggest issues of multicollinearity. Table 1 Panel regression analysis estimates with fixed effects for the G7 Full size table Table 2 Panel regression analysis estimates with fixed effects for the EM7 Full size table Table 3 Summary statistics and cross-correlation matrix for the G7 Full size table Table 4 Summary statistics and cross-correlation matrix for the EM7 Full size table In Table 1, columns 1-2 contain the panel regression estimates for current health expenditure in GDP (CHE), for our basic and extended model respectively. Similarly, we represent the results for the remaining models. Regressions 3 and 4 present the results for per capita current health expenditure. Regressions 5 and 6 provide the results for CHE per capita in PPP in constant 2011 international USD. Regressions 7 and 8 provide the results for domestic general government health expenditure (GGHE-D) as a percentage of CHE. Regressions 9 and 10 provide the results for out-of-pocket expenditure (OOPS) per capita in PPP international USD. Finally, regressions 11 and 12 provide the results for OOPS as a percentage of CHE. In Table 2, columns 1-2 contain the panel regression estimates for current health expenditure in GDP (CHE), for our basic and extended models respectively. Similarly, we represent the results for the remaining models. Regressions 3 and 4 presentthe results for per capita current health expenditure. Regressions 5 and 6 provide the results for CHE per capita in PPP in constant 2011 international USD. Regressions 7 and 8 provide the results for domestic general government health expenditure (GGHE-D) as a percentage of CHE. Regressions 9 and 10 provide the results for out-of-pocket expenditure (OOPS) per capita in PPP international USD. Finally, regressions 11 and 12 provide the results for OOPS as a percentage of CHE. In the EM7 countries, real GDP growth had a negative, statistically and economically significant effect on current health expenditure expressed as a percentage of GDP, CHE per capita in PPP in constant 2011 international USD, and out-of-pocket expenditure (OOPS) per capita in PPP international USD (see Table 2). The impact of other control variables was not systematic in both groups. Real GDP growth had a negative, statistically and economically significant effect only on current health expenditure expressed as a percentage of GDP and CHE per capita in USD constant 2010. Regarding the effects of control variables, there is a statistically and economically significant negative effect of governance effectiveness on per capita current health expenditure and CHE per capita in PPP in constant 2011 international USD. There is a statistically and economically significant impact of the number of physicians on CHE per capita in PPP in constant 2011 international USD (positive) and domestic general government health expenditure (GGHE-D) as a percentage of CHE (positive), and out-of-pocket expenditure as a percentage of CHE (negative). DiscussionThe world economy has experienced profound changes in the past few decades and is expected to undergo uneven globalisation trends [20]. The increasing influence of the large emerging markets on the global economy has become an important issue that calls for more research and policy attention [21]. This growth is expected to be primarily driven by the emerging markets and developing nations, with the EM7 economies growing at an annual average rate of almost 3.5% during the next 34 years [22]. In contrast, an annual average growth rate of 1.6% is predicted for the G7 countries [23]. It further elucidates that the EM7 could account for nearly 50% of the globe’s GDP by 2050, while the G7’s share of global GDP might decline to just over 20%. It is due to population ageing [24] and reduction of natural resources [25]. It clearly indicates that the EM7 is expanding, while the G7 is shrinking [26]. However, it takes more time to implement universal healthcare (UHC) in the EM7 [27] because there is still no policy and program priority for health [28]. Except for the United States, the G7 countries have already achieved UHC [29]. Coverage of universal health insurance should be a high priority for the EM7 countries. Ordinary citizens’ capacity concerning the acquisition of UHC’s benefits spread efficiently, but not fast enough to follow-up disproportionate rapid growth of out-of-pocket spending [30]. In the XXI century, the G7 countries have invested in health around 10% of GDP each year [31], along with similar amounts allocated to infrastructure [15]. In contrast, the EM7 countries have invested in health less than 5 % GDP [32] and set priority to infrastructure and economic growth. Lastly, the results of the regression analysis, related to the composition of indicators affected by the real GDP growth, as well as the predicted direction of the effect can be attributed to the differences in budget planning priorities, and GDP per capita, in the compared groups. A set of economic inefficiencies among emerging markets are also attributable to the double economic burden of the unliquidated pool of infectious diseases associated with non-communicable infections [33]. The contribution of population ageing to the growing demand for long-term medical care and pharmaceuticals is probably the most vivid, when comparing Japan [34] with China [35]. These two are the most representative of both groups. In demographic terms, Japan remains in the most advanced stage of population ageing [36]. Yet, even with the recent abolishment of one-child policies [37], China has exhibited only a sudden, but temporary upward shift in fertility rates during the early 2010s, returning to the ratio of 1.1 child per woman [38]. This is far below the simple population replacement threshold of 2.1, and China is most likely to become the fastest ageing nation by 2060 [39]. In addition to the accumulation of incidence of autoimmune [40], cancer [41], and dementia [42] morbidity among elderly citizens, here we face another important phenomenon. It is the so-called “the last year of life” [43]. Its costs of intensive, palliative, and home-based medical care, requiring nursing staff, due to the gradual disappearance of family caregiving across Asia [44], generates costs that are, on average, equal to the entire life-time medical consumption of that individual citizen. Thus, the economic implications for the health system workload and the financial burden for the social support systems, in the societies with ever-larger populations of elderly citizens, are clear in both the G7 and the EM7. Yet, the latter group of countries finds itself confronted with a much more serious challenge. Namely, population ageing, as the third demographic transition, does not only become a global phenomenon (with 17–18 outlier African nations [45, 46] and Afghanistan [47]), but it is accelerating across the globe. Unlike the Western hemisphere [48], in the EM7, such changes were driven by the spreading of globalisation and sexual revolution during and after the XX century [49], leading to the absorption of women into the labour markets worldwide [50]. The ultimate outcome of this equation was the creation of financial incentives by contemporary societies, Eastern and Western alike, to attract women into the workforce, which, in turn, had a negative effect on the child-per-woman ratio [51]. Here, we come up to the important disadvantage of the emerging nations in this struggle [52]. Ageing, itself, in Western European societies, had its roots in the XIX century [53]. Thus, if one observes the time that was necessary to double the population of senior citizens, from 7 to 14%, in France, it took 115 years, while in Brazil, it took 21 years only. It is clear that the G7 nations, experiencing these changes, historically, in a much earlier momentum, had far more time to evolve, gradually, their social support and health insurance coverage systems to meet the challenge [54]. However, in the emerging, rapidly developing nations, which, with the notable exception of the former Soviet Union [55], were largely non-industrialised countries, it happened much faster. Indonesia [56], Mexico [57], and Turkey [58] face similar problems related to the double burden of infectious illnesses, non-communicable diseases, and lack of social capital and medical staff capacities to cover these needs. These same matters were already elaborated on in academic literature on BRICS [59], with Russia having historically the earliest developed capacities in preventative medicine and screening procedures [60]. Even today, in a leading Chinese nation, with abundant national welfare [61], cancer-screening procedures, leading to serious long-term savings, are only being systematically pursued in coastal and some urban areas [62]. The approaching health policy reforms in the EM7 is likely to enforce these priorities, even despite the reluctance of their governments to push for higher healthcare investments [63]. Actually, among the BRICS, as the core subgroup of the EM7, all states except India, have managed to increase their GDP share of national health spending from one to two percentage points, on average, since 1990 [64]. This positive trend needs more financial resources and development to be on a par with the G7 countries [65]. This is how we try to explain the core finding of this research. How could it be possible that the EM7, despite their better performance in terms of real GDP growth throughout the crisis, did not channel more welfare into population health? The answer lies in the fact that the XIX century European-style health systems were entirely built upon in the era of sustainable demographic growth [66]. Working citizens contributed to various social and health insurance models, through mandatory taxes, to support the devaluating and insufficiently large pensions and retirement funds for the elderly [67]. Long decades of the post-WWII European social evolution resulted in the creation of the welfare state [68]. In France, an average citizen could enjoy up to 24 years of state-sponsored pension with full pension and release from any mandatory work after his or her retirement [69]. Given the current fertility rates and the increased longevity of post-war generations of baby boomers, these retirements have long since disappeared [70]. We face, nowadays, ever-shrinking cohorts of work-capable citizens at their best age. At the same time, cohorts of the elderly become, annually, evermore increasing in number, leading to a severe distortion of healthy demographic pyramids [71]. The only partial exemption to this case, driven by Latin American immigration, is the USA [72]. All other Western nations follow the very same pattern, with Germany and Italy being among the worst ones, in the most advanced stage of the third demographic transition [73]. Here, we easily observe that the base of taxpayers is getting smaller and the base of tax consumers is getting larger and heavier [74]. Currently foreseen strategies, some of them imposed by the European Commission, refer to extending life work age [75] and thresholds for retirements including re-integration of cancer-survivors [76] and other people, with decreased working ability, back to the labour markets. These measures, including immigration of foreign-born workforces, so far imply the limited outreach [77]. Therefore, health expenditure among the G7 is likely to continue growing, at least twice as fast as the overall economy (with the notable exception of Japan) in the upcoming decades [78]. Obviously, mature economies of the G7 and rapidly evolving economies of the EM7, each following its own distinctive historical pathway, are likely to conform to similar challenges, but from entirely different perspectives [79]. Likewise, their strategies to cope with the burden of medical care spending, and citizen out-of-pocket spending, in particular, are likely to be profoundly different and tailored to their own needs [80]. ConclusionGlobalisation and its underlying processes has contributed to the creation of conditions for the rise of the EM7 economies. Major emerging markets exhibited a stronger endurance, to withstand the consequences of the global economic crisis, in comparison with traditional, industrial high-income nations [81]. Evidence of this is most visible in the real growth rates and unemployment rate levels, before, during and after the crisis. This situation affected health spending patterns in both groups, although they tend to diverge, instead of converge in several important areas. It was quite surprising to discover that GDP was growing faster than out-of-pocket health spending. One should not forget that, in absolute terms, it is substantially higher, today, compared to the beginning of the XXI century in both groups of nations. Keeping in mind social insurance programs and the affordability of medical care among the G7 citizens, it is well known that such change will lead to far worse consequences among the emerging nations. The vulnerability of ordinary citizens, particularly those living in rural areas, far away from the cities and industrial areas, might lead to increased health expenditure. Regression analysis demonstrated that real GDP growth affects different aspects of healthcare expenditure in the compared groups. In the G7 countries, real GDP growth had a positive impact on out-of-pocket expenditure, expressed as a percentage of CHE only. In the EM7 countries, it affected, negatively, the current health expenditure, expressed as a percentage of GDP, CHE per capita in PPP in constant 2011 international USD, and out-of-pocket expenditure per capita in PPP international USD. Governments in the emerging economies shall be challenged to increase their investment into healthcare systems, in order to support current economy growth in the long run [82]. Currently, serious social inequalities, in terms of access and affordability of medical care and pharmaceuticals, among most of the EM7 countries, shall be smoothed to some extent by the continuous growth of the middle class in China and India and economic recovery in Russia and Brazil in 2015–2016. The G7 nations preserve their stable allocation of resources for healthcare in the first decades of the XXI century, although with concerning long-term sustainability perspective, primarily due to population ageing consequences [83,84,85,86]. Availability of data and materialsThe datasets generated and/or analysed during the current study are available in the WHO Global Health Expenditure Database, https://apps.who.int/nha/database; the World Development Indicators Database, https://databank.worldbank.org/source/world-development-indicators; and the IMF Data Mapper repository, http://www.imf.org/external/datamapper/ References
Download references AcknowledgementsThe authors are thankful to Ulf-Göran Gerdtham, Head of Lund University Division of Health Economics for his valuable comments and guidance during the FORTE Project. FundingThis study was funded by the Ministry of Education Science and Technological Development of Serbia (Grant OI 175 014) and FORTE Grant (Diary number 2017–02235; decision number DELG-2017/0024). Publication of results was not contingent upon neither Serbian Ministry’s nor Swedish Science Fund’s censorship or approval. Author informationAuthors and Affiliations
Authors
ContributionsMJ was responsible for the study design and research questions definition, obtained funding, supervised and coordinated the joint efforts. MJ, NR, POF, JPT, YT and VR provided administrative and technical support. NR acquired the data. MJ and YT interpreted the results of analysis. MJ and YT drafted the manuscript. All authors read and approved the final manuscript. Corresponding authorCorrespondence to Mihajlo Jakovljevic. Ethics declarationsEthics approval and consent to participateEthical Committee (IRB) Consideration and Approval as per ICMJE / COPE criteria was not applicable to this study. It is a study conducted on a national level aggregate data. This was no clinical trial with patients, neither animal research study neither any private citizens data legal protection issues were involved. This is regular to publish Aggregate panel data analysis without any applicable Ethical recommendations. Informed consent collections was not applicable since there were no human objects of research. Consent for publicationConsent for publication as per ICMJE / COPE criteria was not applicable to this study. Competing interestsThe authors declare that they have no competing interests. Additional informationPublisher’s NoteSpringer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. Rights and permissionsOpen Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article's Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article's Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated in a credit line to the data. Reprints and Permissions About this articleCite this articleJakovljevic, M., Timofeyev, Y., Ranabhat, C. et al. Real GDP growth rates and healthcare spending – comparison between the G7 and the EM7 countries. Global Health 16, 64 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12992-020-00590-3 Download citation
Keywords
What happens when GDP increases?In broad terms, an increase in real GDP is interpreted as a sign that the economy is doing well. When real GDP is growing strongly, employment is likely to be increasing as companies hire more workers for their factories and people have more money in their pockets.
How does GDP affect economic growth?Faster growth in gross domestic product (GDP) expands the overall size of the economy and strengthens fiscal conditions. Broadly shared growth in per capita GDP increases the typical American's material standard of living.
What does a high GDP mean?GDP matters because it shows how healthy the economy is
Rising GDP means the economy is growing, and the resources available to people in the country – goods and services, wages and profits – are increasing.
Does high GDP mean high standard of living?Key Takeaways
However, economists often make adjustments to GDP, such as using real GDP, or use alternative methods for determining the standard of living. Generally, rising global income translates to a higher standard of living, while diminishing global income causes the standard of living to decline.
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