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Lecture 20: Public Goods

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Title: Lecture 20: Public Goods


1
Lecture 20 Public Goods Health
Richard Smith Reader in Health Economics School
of Medicine, Health Policy Practice
2
Overview of lecture
  • What is a public good?
  • Is health a public good?
  • Importance of public goods for health
  • Global public goods and health

3
Public goods
  • Goods which market will not provide as
  • non-excludable (non-exclusive)
  • benefits of good freely available to all or
    prohibitively costly to provide good only to
    people who pay for it and prevent or exclude
    other people from obtaining it
  • non-rival in consumption (inexhaustible)
  • quantity available for other people does not fall
    when someone consumes it, such that the total
    cost of production does not increase as the
    number of consumers increases (MC of additional
    user 0)
  • Public goods are NOT goods provided by the state
    (e.g. NOT public health systems!)

4
Examples of public goods
  • Defence
  • Given size of armed forces may protect population
    of 10, 20, 50 or 100 million people
  • Law order
  • Foreign visitor benefits from crime-free streets
    as much as local residents
  • Information
  • Discovery of food additive that causes cancer
    cost borne once, then cost of dissemination so
    that all can benefit is (virtually) zero
  • Infectious disease surveillance (prevent
    epidemics)

5
Is health a public good?
  • Health per se is NOT a public good
  • one persons health status primarily benefits
    them
  • goods and services necessary to provide and
    sustain health are predominantly rival and
    excludable
  • BUT are aspects that have PG aspects (e.g.
    communicable disease control - HPA)

6
Quasi-public goods
  • Public goods are rarely pure often
  • non-excludable but rival common pool goods
  • Beach on a bank holiday, car MoT test
  • non-rival but excludable club goods
  • Satellite television signals, polio vaccination
  • Technology geography determine the degree of
    publicness (e.g. television radio signals,
    street lights)

7
Public-private spectrum
8
Access goods
  • Private goods are often required to access public
    goods (e.g. PC to access internet)
  • This restricts scope of the benefits from public
    goods and may lead to perverse targeting
  • To secure provision of some public goods required
    access goods may thus be considered as if they
    were public goods

9
Importance of public goods
  • Free markets under-supply public goods because
  • non-excludability leads to free-riding
  • non-rivalry leads to lower than socially optimal
    consumption

10
Non-excludability free-riding
  • A free-rider is someone willing (hoping) to let
    others pay for a public good they will consume
    (e.g. cure for cancer)
  • If everyone tries to be a free-rider, no one pays
    for the good to be produced
  • Leads to societal loss of welfare everyone
    worse off prisoners dilemma

11
Non-rivalry
  • Private good rivalry means each unit only
    consumed by 1 consumer (? demand ? quantity)
  • Market demand horizontal sum of demand curves
    (sum of all quantities demanded at given price)
  • Public good nonrivalry means each unit is
    consumed by all consumers (?demand ?quantity)
  • Market demand vertical sum of demand curves
    (sum of price each consumer WTP for single unit)

12
Private individual demand curve
13
Private market demand curve
14
Public quasi-demand curve
15
Aggregate value of public good
16
Dilemma of private supply of PGs
  • Firms may devise methods to reduce the
    non-excludability (free-rider) problem (e.g.
    encrypted TV signals - club solution)
  • BUT high costs associated with achieving this
    excludability means cost gt benefit for any one
    consumer and non-rivalry thus means no production

17
Why no private production
18
Inefficiencies in private supply
19
Example PGH medical research
  • Discovery of bacteria by Louis Pasteur began
    revolution in treatment of disease, saved wool
    industry from anthrax, improved brewing and dairy
    products
  • No single beneficiary (firm or consumer) obtains
    benefits sufficient to cover costs
  • Cost of research supported by (French) government
  • Underinvestment if beneficiaries do not pay

20
Central problem
  • Core policy issue is therefore one of ensuring
    collective action to facilitate production of,
    and access to, goods which are largely
    non-excludable and non-rival in consumption
  • Role usually assigned to government (although not
    exclusively - peer pressure, social
    responsibility, community, fairness)

21
Role for government
  • Public good aspects are often a rationale for
    government finance through
  • Fees (e.g. prescription, dental). Still loss
    welfare as leads to inefficient exclusion where
    people excluded even though benefitgtcost
  • Privatizing (excluding) a public good through
    establishing property rights - patent system
  • Direct finance, funded through general taxation
  • Other financial incentives/compensation - permits

22
Role for government
  • There are drawbacks associated with
    governmentally provided public goods
  • There may still be welfare loss from free goods
    (depending on actual cost)
  • Level of provision may be hard to determine -
    problems in obtaining social value (incentive
    to over/under state value CBA replaces market
    pricing)
  • Government programs may reflect political
    pressure to benefit special-interest groups

23
Global public goods
24
What is a global public good?
  • A public good with quasi-universal benefits in
    terms of
  • Countries - more than one group of countries
  • People - accruing to several, preferably all,
    population groups
  • Generations - extending to both current future
    generations, or at least meeting needs of current
    without foreclosing development options for
    future generations
  • Rarely pure - tend toward universality in
    benefiting more than one group of countries,
    population group and/or generation

25
Is health a global public good?
  • Health is NOT a global public good
  • one nations health status primarily benefits
    them
  • goods and services necessary to provide and
    sustain health are predominantly rival and
    excludable
  • BUT are aspects that have global aspects
  • E.g. communicable disease eradication

26
Global Polio Eradication Initiative
  • Inactivated poliovirus vaccine (IPV) oral polio
    vaccine (OPV) eradicated polio in West, but
    remained a problem in developing nations
  • 1988 World Health Assembly voted to eradicate
  • Non-rival - one persons protection will not
    reduce anothers
  • Non-excludable - no limit to safety that
    eradication will offer - geographically or
    demographically

27
Poliomyelitis distribution 1988/2001
1988
gt125 countries
2001
10 countries
28
Practicalities of production
  • Effort required to eradicate polio correlated
    inversely with income (?MC)
  • GPEI required substantial in-kind financial
    contributions from endemic polio-free
    countries, NGOs private-public partnership
  • A number of free riders remain

29
Donors to GPEI 1985-2001 (2bn)
WHO Regular Budget
Belgium
Australia
UNICEF
Aventis Pasteur/IFPMA
Canada
Other
European Union
Netherlands
US CDC
Germany
UN Foundation
Denmark
USAID
Bill Melinda Gates Foundation
World Bank IDA Credit to Govt of India
Japan
Rotary International
United Kingdom
30
What may be GPG for health?
  • Knowledge (and technologies)
  • Policy and regulatory regimes
  • Health systems (as key access goods)

31
Example Genomics (knowledge)
  • Genomics study of organisms entire genetic
    material (30-40,000 genes in humans)
  • Human Genome Project
  • involves research teams in 20 different countries
  • gt3bn public sector funding
  • Bermuda Accord - data made publicly available
    within 24 hours
  • Potential benefits
  • Clinical diagnostics and predictive testing
  • Identifying new treatment
  • Developing preventive measures
  • Direct economic benefits
  • Genomics is principally about knowledge public
    good

32
GPG aspects of genomics
33
Key issues
  • Intellectual property rights and patent
    legislation
  • Non-exclusion lack of commercial incentive
  • Patents grant artificial exclusion, but create
    club good - socially sub-optimal
    production/consumption of genomics
  • Turning knowledge in to practice the importance
    of access goods
  • Capacity strengthening - RD, ethical, legal,
    social and policy
  • Knowledge is tacit
  • International bodies to organise, advocate and
    regulate input of national governments other
    players

34
GPGs and collective action
  • At international level there is no counterpart
    world government
  • Core policy issue is therefore one of ensuring
    international collective action to facilitate the
    production of, and access to, goods which are
    largely non-excludable and non-rival in
    consumption, and yield significant external
    benefits, across multiple nations

35
Global public goods theory versus practice
  • GPG theoretically non-excludable, but in practice
    may be barriers to access. E.g.
    technological/financial restrictions to accessing
    information on the Internet
  • Some countries may not be able to collaborate on
    global initiatives, such as surveillance,
    adhering to international standard treatment
    protocols etc
  • Strengthening of health care and infra-structure
    systems may therefore become a GPGH

36
Role of international bodies
  • Initial international decision to produce the
    GPGH
  • Enactment of (inter-) national legislation and
    the creation of mechanisms required to provide
    the GPGH
  • Enforcement of legislation, operation of supply
    mechanisms and compliance with international
    decision

37
Role of international bodies
  • Large number of actors
  • Government (developed and developing countries)
  • Companies (national and transnational)
  • Non-government organisations (national and
    international campaign groups, interest groups
    etc)
  • People (voters, workers, health service users,
    etc)
  • So, who, globally, defines political agenda and
    priorities for resource allocation? Who
    enforces?
  • Lessons from climatic change
  • reducing CFCs resolved due to high bencost
    ratio for most countries regardless of what
    others did
  • reducing carbon emissions lower bencost ratio
    and dependent on actions of other countries

38
Financing GPGH who pays?
  • International agencies?
  • National governments?
  • Transnational corporations?
  • Developed country governments are the major
    prospective source of financing for GPGs,
    directly or through international institutions
  • Major concern that this may divert ODA
  • BUT GPG concept predicated on self-interest -
    implies support is investment in domestic health

39
Financing GPGH how?
  • Mechanisms
  • Voluntary contributions
  • Ear-marked national taxes coordinated between
    countries
  • Taxes imposed and collected at global level
  • Market-based mechanisms
  • BUT those who lose from provision of GPGs have
    incentive for noncomplicance, so require
  • Formal coercion - limited on global level
  • Informal coercion - unstable and unreliable
  • Compensation - essential with or without coercion

40
GPGH conclusions
  • Recognition of the interdependency of nations
    (and populations generations) and the need for
    collective action
  • New rationale for funding (additional to ODA)
    from developed countries
  • Emphasises the importance of international bodies
    and international action in creation of
    mechanisms and institutions required

41
Further references
  • Smith RD, Beaglehole R, Woodward D, Drager N
    (2003). Global public goods for health a health
    economic and public health perspective, Oxford
    University Press, Oxford.
  • Smith RD, Woodward D, Acharya A, Beaglehole R,
    Drager N. Communicable disease control a
    global public good perspective. Health Policy
    and Planning, 2004 19(5) 272-279.
  • Smith RD, Thorsteinsdóttir H, Daar A, Gold R,
    Singer P. Genomics knowledge and equity a
    global public goods perspective of the patent
    system. Bulletin of the World Health
    Organization, 2004 82(5) 385-389.
  • Smith RD. Global public goods and health.
    Bulletin of the World Health Organization, 2003
    81(7) 475 (editorial).
  • Thorsteinsdóttir H, Daar A, Smith RD, Singer P.
    Genomics - a global public good? The Lancet,
    2003 361 891-892.
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