Abstract

The ageing of the countries’ populations, and in particular the growing number of the very old, is increasing the need for long-term care (LTC). Not surprisingly, therefore, the financing of LTC systems has become a crucial topic across the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). In the last three decades, various financing policies have been carried out in different countries and the related international debate has grown. The latter has so far focused mostly on the different alternatives to collect economic resources to pay for care. The international debate needs now to focus also on other issues, so far less discussed. One is the politics of LTC: the degree and nature of the political interest in LTC, that affects the size and profile of public financing. The other is resource allocation: how different services and benefits are distributed among people with different care needs, that determines if resources made available are optimized. If we do not pay more attention to these issues – inextricably connected to policies aimed to collect funds – our understanding of LTC financing will remain inevitably limited.

Highlights

  • The growing number of people living to older and older ages produces increasing pressure on the financing of long-term care (LTC) systems.[1]

  • The debate has focused on the different alternatives to finance LTC, ie, to collect economic resources to pay for care, their various designs and the related implications.[7,8,9]

  • I refer to: (a) before financing: degree and nature of the political interest in LTC, that affects the size and profile of public financing; (b) after financing: resource allocation, ie, how different services and benefits are distributed among people with different care needs, that determines if resources made available are optimized

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Summary

Introduction

The growing number of people living to older and older ages produces increasing pressure on the financing of long-term care (LTC) systems.[1]. I refer to: (a) before financing: degree and nature of the political interest in LTC, that affects the size and profile of public financing; (b) after financing: resource allocation, ie, how different services and benefits are distributed among people with different care needs, that determines if resources made available are optimized.

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