How Does Fiscal Decentralization Affect Health Outcomes? Evidence from China

Risk Manag Healthc Policy. 2023 Sep 16:16:1893-1903. doi: 10.2147/RMHP.S412547. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

Background: The impact of fiscal decentralization on health outcomes still has not reached a consensus, and studies conducted in the context of the new round of fiscal and taxation system reform are even less available. China's fiscal decentralization system has its own special characteristics, so it is necessary to analyze the impact of fiscal decentralization on health outcomes before and after the new round of fiscal and taxation system reform in China.

Methods: Panel data from 2007 to 2019 were obtained through China's Health Statistics Yearbook and China's Statistical Yearbook. The effects of fiscal decentralization on health outcomes before and after the reform are explored separately by SYS-GMM, which introduce a dynamical model with a lag period of the explained variables. The Hansen test is used to determine excessive identification. The AR(2) is used to determine whether the residual term of the differential equation has a second-order serial correlation.

Results: Fiscal decentralization consistently had a negative impact on health outcomes, yet government health expenditures did not mediate the impact of fiscal decentralization on health outcomes. Fiscal decentralization had a positive effect on per capita government health expenditure before the new reforms, yet had a negative effect on the percentage of government health expenditures, both before and after the new reform.

Conclusion: China's fiscal decentralization has caused local governments to pay insufficient attention to the construction of people's livelihoods, and the problem of insufficient government investment in health has not been improved. The new round of fiscal and taxation system reform has not reversed this situation either. It is recommended to adjust the incentive system for local officials, include medical and health in the evaluation indicators of local governments, optimize the structure of government expenditure, and improve the efficiency of the use of government health expenditure.

Keywords: China’s new round of fiscal and tax reforms; fiscal decentralization; government health expenditure; health outcomes.

Grants and funding

The research is supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (no.71974133, 71573182).