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Challenges for financing and providing long-term-care in Eastern Europe

Challenges for financing and providing long-term-care in Eastern Europe. Johannes Koettl and Sarbani Chakraborty Europe and Central Asia Regions – Human Development Sector. Background. World Bank prepared report on LTC challenges for the New Member States of the EU and Croatia Focus on

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Challenges for financing and providing long-term-care in Eastern Europe

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  1. Challenges for financing and providing long-term-care in Eastern Europe Johannes Koettland SarbaniChakraborty Europe and Central Asia Regions – Human Development Sector

  2. Background • World Bank prepared report on LTC challenges for the New Member States of the EU and Croatia • Focus on • Demographic transition in Eastern Europe and implications for LTC • Current LTC systems (financing, provisionof services, regulations) in Bulgaria, Croatia, Latvia, and Poland • Lessons learned from OECD countries (Austria, Germany, France, United States)

  3. Key messages • LTC sector has to prepare for future demographic “shocks” • Substantial future fiscal pressure from LTC expenditures in ECA countries • Policy implications • Urgent need to mobilize financing for future LTC expenditures now • Control demand and costs for formal LTC services: • From health to social services • From institutional to community-based care • From care fragmentation to care coordination • From producing to purchasing LTC services • From in-kind to cash benefits

  4. 1. Prepare for demographic shocks • Population is aging rapidly, yet not at a constant rate, but in waves • These waves will lead to sudden increases in the number of dependent people • There will be much less healthy people, and more and more dependent people • Who will then care for the dependent? • There will be much less young people, and more and more old people • Who will then pay the care for the dependent?

  5. Example: PolandPolish society is aging rapidly, yet not at a constant rate, but in waves: 2010 Source: Eurostat

  6. Example: PolandPolish society is aging rapidly, yet not at a constant rate, but in waves: 2020 Source: Eurostat

  7. Example: PolandPolish society is aging rapidly, yet not at a constant rate, but in waves: 2030 Source: Eurostat

  8. Example: PolandPolish society is aging rapidly, yet not at a constant rate, but in waves: 2040 Source: Eurostat

  9. Example: PolandPolish society is aging rapidly, yet not at a constant rate, but in waves: 2050 Source: Eurostat

  10. Example: PolandPolish society is aging rapidly, yet not at a constant rate, but in waves: 2060 Source: Eurostat

  11. Sudden increase of 75+ age group during 2020s and after 2045 Annual population growth rate by age group Source: Eurostat

  12. Dependency level is highest among older age groups… Dependency level by age group for Poland Source: SILC

  13. …so demographic waves will lead to sudden increases in the number of dependent people… Projected annual population growth rates by dependency level in Poland Source: World Bank staff calculations

  14. …while the healthy population is constantly decreasing (green line) Projected annual population growth rates by dependency level in Poland Source: World Bank staff calculations

  15. Who will care and who will pay? • There will be much less healthy people, and more and more dependent people • Who will then care for the dependent? • There will be much less people in working age, and more and more retired people • Who will then pay the care for the dependent?

  16. Today: 11 healthy per severely dependent2060: 5 healthy per severely dependent Projected inverse dependency ratios for Poland Source: World Bank staff calculations

  17. Today: 5 aged 15-64 per 65+2060: less than 2 Projected inverse dependency ratios for Poland Source: World Bank staff calculations

  18. Key messages • LTC sector has to prepare for future demographic “shocks” • Substantial future fiscal pressure from LTC expenditures in ECA countries • Policy implications • Urgent need to mobilize financing for future LTC expenditures now • Control demand and costs for formal LTC services: • From health to social services • From institutional to community-based care • From care fragmentation to care coordination • From producing to purchasing LTC services • From in-kind to cash benefits

  19. 2. Substantial future fiscal pressure from LTC expenditures in ECA countries • Combination of • Steep expenditure increases per beneficiary in the past (quality improvements) • Expansion of formal services (larger share of elderly consume formal services) • Overall increase in number of elderly • Strong expenditure growth dynamic

  20. Example: Poland • Two scenarios: • If expenditures per beneficiary continue to grow like between 2006 and 2008, cost explosion (pessimistic scenario) • If expenditures per beneficiary grow with GDP per capita, still considerable increase in spending (optimistic scenario)

  21. Public expenditures per beneficiary increase strongly… Public expenditures per beneficiary by benefit type and sector in Poland (current PLZ, 2005 to 2008) Source: Wieckowska (2009) and own calculations

  22. …on average more than 8% annually for in-patient LTC Annual real growth rates of public expenditures per beneficiary by benefit type and sector in Poland (percent, 2006 to 2008) Source: Wieckowska (2009) and own calculations

  23. The pessimistic scenario Projected public expenditures on LTC (as share of GDP) Source: World Bank staff calculations

  24. Example: Poland • What are assumptions in optimistic scenario? • Return to strong GDP growth • Likely to happen, but what if not? • Expenditures per beneficiary (costs) increase with GDP per capita • Unlikely • Share of population who demand formal services stays constant • Very unlikely • Optimistic scenario seems more like minimum increase in public expenditures (over-optimistic)

  25. Share of dependents who receive NO care in Poland more than 80 percent=> most likely to decrease strongly Share of dependents with no or informal care, 2005 Source: EC

  26. The optimistic scenario Projected public expenditures on LTC (as share of GDP) Source: World Bank staff calculations

  27. Example: Poland • Where will Poland end up? Somewhere in between…. • In any case, sharp increase in spending during “shock” years (2020s and after 2050)

  28. Key messages • LTC sector has to prepare for future demographic “shocks” • Substantial future fiscal pressure from LTC expenditures in ECA countries • Policy implications • Urgent need to mobilize financing for future LTC expenditures now • Control demand and costs for formal LTC services: • From health to social services • From institutional to community-based care • From care fragmentation to care coordination • From producing to purchasing LTC services • From in-kind to cash benefits

  29. 3.i) Urgent need to mobilize financing for future LTC expenditures now • Risk-pooling is essential to avoid old-age poverty • Private LTC insurance has not been very successful • Market failures (adverse selection, risk selection) • Unpredictability of costs lead to high mark-ups • Large role for public sector • Tax-financed (cash benefits, social assistance) • Contribution financed (social security) • Both are pay-as-you-go mechanisms • Who will pay?

  30. Who will pay?Today’s young can pay for tomorrow’s old… Source: Eurostat

  31. …but who will pay for today’s young when they are old? ? Source: Eurostat

  32. Increase private savings for retirement and dependency now • Increase savings of current working age population for their own retirement and dependency needs • Private financial products (not LTC insurance for in-kind benefits) to insure against poverty in case of dependency • Example of France • Enhanced annuity (life insurance payments increases in case of dependency) • Reversed mortgage

  33. 3.ii) Control demand and costs for formal LTC services • Promote healthy life-styles • From health to social services and from institutional to community-based care • Channel future demand for formal LTC to more adequate and less expensive services • Away from medical care and hospital care • Toward social care, especially community-based care • Resist converting hospital infrastructure into inpatient LTC infrastructure • Rather, invest in community care centers that offer a wide variety of (outpatient) care services (daycare and home-based care) • From care fragmentation to care coordination • Especially between health and social sector to avoid cost shifting at the expense of patients • Joint needs assessments by inter-disciplinary teams (GP and social worker) • Scaled benefits

  34. 3.ii) Control demand and costs for formal LTC services • From producing to purchasing LTC services • In the future, a much larger share of the economy will evolve around providing care • Cannot be done by public sector alone • Define core competencies of the public sector • The rest, buy from private market • Proper regulation, accreditation, standards of care, and quality control mechanisms • Institutions and mechanisms might take time to develop • In the meantime, explore potential of public-private partnerships • From in-kind to cash benefits • Puts consumer in charge • Main vehicle to support (cheap) informal care • Maybe easier to control public expenditures on cash benefits • Explore potential of vouchers

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