Abstract

The Indonesian government has made some ambitious steps to achieve Universal Health Coverage through the newly formed National Health Insurance [Jaminan Kesehatan Nasional (JKN)], establishing a single-payer insurance agency and prospective provider payment mechanism. This study aims to assess the benefit incidence of healthcare funding in the JKN era, and its distribution by socio-economic status considering regional variation in unit costs. We evaluate whether the benefit incidence of funding is skewed towards urban and wealthier households. We also investigate whether standard benefit incidence analysis using national unit costs underestimates regional disparities in healthcare funding. Lastly, we examine whether the design of the JKN provider payment system exacerbates regional inequalities in healthcare funding and treatment intensity. The analysis relies on Indonesia’s annual National Socio-economic Survey (Susenas) and administrative data on JKN provider payments from 2015 to 2017, combined at district level for 466 districts. We find that the benefit incidence of healthcare expenditure favours the wealthier groups. We also observe substantial variation in hospital unit costs across regions in Indonesia. As a result, standard benefit incidence analysis (using national average unit transfers) underestimates the inequality due to regional disparities in healthcare supply and intensity of treatment. The JKN provider payment seems to favour relatively wealthier regions that harbour more advanced healthcare services. Urban dwellers and people living in Java and Bali also enjoy greater healthcare benefit incidence compared to rural areas and the other islands.

Highlights

  • Indonesia introduced the National Health Insurance System [Jaminan Kesehatan Nasional (JKN)] in 2014 to achieve universal health coverage by 2024

  • Trisnantoro (2019) reports that twothirds of the 61 class A hospitals in Indonesia are located in Java Island and 16 of these are in Jakarta

  • Our research findings show that the benefits of healthcare spending since the introduction of Indonesia’s JKN program are distributed disproportionately favouring the wealthier population groups, as well as urban areas and islands Java and Bali

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Summary

Introduction

Indonesia introduced the National Health Insurance System [Jaminan Kesehatan Nasional (JKN)] in 2014 to achieve universal health coverage by 2024. Mandated by Indonesian Law Number 40 in 2004 regarding the National Social Security System, the JKN consolidated existing mandatory social health insurance schemes (public servants, military, police and the formal private sector) and the subsidized insurance to the poor. Informal sector workers, accounting for around 60% of the Indonesian labour force, were required to selfenrol. JKN is arguably one of the largest single-payer health insurance systems in the world (The Lancet, 2019). By October 2020, JKN had enrolled around 223.5 million members, representing $82% of the VC The Author(s) 2021.

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