This is the Fraser Institute's fifth annual report on the
financial sustainability of health spending by provincial
governments in Canada. The report uses a moving 10-year trend
analysis to measure sustainability. The report also examines
the long-term practicability of attempts by provincial
governments to deal with the unsustainable growth in health
spending through increased tax burdens and centrally planned
rationing. The analysis partially exposes the degree to which
Canadians are paying more for government health insurance and
getting less in return.
The data and analysis in this report indicate that public
health insurance, as it is currently structured in Canada,
produces rates of growth in government health care spending
that are not financially sustainable through public means
alone. This financial crisis is occurring while governments are
restricting and reducing the range of benefits covered under
publicly funded health insurance. As an alternative to the
current approach to health policy, we recommend that
governments take a number of actions to ensure that Canadians
will not continue paying more and getting less.