

Health Accounts measure current expenditure on healthcare only. More information about the definitions of health accounts and the differences between health accounts and other healthcare expenditure analyses is available in the Introduction to Health Accounts. The definition of healthcare used in Health Accounts is somewhat broader than that used in other UK healthcare expenditure analyses (including our earlier Expenditure on Healthcare in the UK publication), and includes a number of services which are typically considered social care in the UK.
#Us budget spending 2016 series#
The time series for UK Health Accounts runs back to 2013. Some OECD member states also produce healthcare expenditure statistics to SHA 2011 definitions for years before 2014, but the length of the back series produced to these definitions varies by country. The SHA 2011 definitions are used to measure healthcare expenditure from 2014 onwards by all EU member states and most other OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development) member states. The UK Health Accounts are produced according to the System of Health Accounts 2011: SHA 2011, which provides internationally standardised definitions both for total current healthcare expenditure, and the analysis of this spending by financing scheme, function and provider organisation. Provider organisation – the type of healthcare provider in which care is carried out Health accounts are a set of statistics analysing healthcare expenditure by three dimensions:įinancing scheme – the source of funding for healthcareįunction – the type of care and mode of provision This bulletin contains data from the UK Health Accounts, providing figures for 2013 to 2016. Things you need to know about this release Total current healthcare expenditure in the UK was 9.8% of gross domestic product (GDP), higher than the median for (OECD) Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development member states but second lowest of the seven nations in the G7, a position which has remained unchanged since UK health accounts were introduced for 2013.Ģ. Government spending accounted for 62% of all spending on long-term care, with most other long-term care spending financed by out-of-pocket payments. Spending on health-related long-term care was £35.5 billion in 2016, with an additional £10.9 billion spent on long-term social care outside the health accounts definitions. Since 2013, government spending on curative and rehabilitative care in an inpatient setting has grown more slowly than curative and rehabilitative care delivered in outpatient, day case or home setting. Government-financed healthcare expenditure accounted for 79.4% of total spending, £152.2 billion. President's Proposed 2016 Budget: Federal Spending and Revenue as Share of U.S.Total current healthcare expenditure in 2016 was £191.7 billion, an increase of 3.6% on spending in 2015, when £185.0 billion was spent on healthcare in the UK.President's Proposed 2016 Budget: Military and Non-Military Discretionary Spending.President's Proposed 2016 Budget: Mandatory and Discretionary Spending and Interest on Debt.President's Proposed 2016 Budget: Mandatory Spending.President's Proposed 2016 Budget: Discretionary Spending.President's Proposed 2016 Budget: Total Spending.Lower than zero spending can occur when segments of government have surpluses from previous years that they return to the federal government. * Spending on Government (administration) is less than zero and omitted in the total spending pie chart. Social Security and labor, Medicare and health programs, and military spending will make up 76 percent of the total budget, leaving just 24 percent, or $957 billion of the $4.1 trillion total, to spend on all other programs. This includes every type of federal spending, from funding for discretionary programs like infrastructure improvements and job training to mandatory spending programs like Social Security and Medicare, as well as interest payments on the federal debt. This chart shows how President Obama proposed allocating $4.1 trillion * in total federal spending in fiscal year 2016, an increase of more than 5 percent over the total 2015 spending level.
