Literature DB >> 8932599

Market commodities and poor relief: the world bank proposal for health.

A C Laurell, O L Arellano.   

Abstract

Investing in Health is the World Bank's blueprint for a new health policy within the context of structural adjustment. While this document includes a broad range of arguments, its implicit premises are neoliberal as can be deduced from its "agenda for action." Health is defined as a private responsibility and health care as a private good. This leads to a health policy based on two complementary principles: the reduction of state intervention and public responsibility, and the promotion of diversity and competition (i.e., privatization). Thus, public institutions should provide only a limited number of public goods and narrowly defined, cost-efficient forms of relief for the poor. All other health-related activities are considered private duties, to be resolved by the market, NGOs, or families. The World Bank policy provides a pragmatic contribution to efforts to achieve fiscal balance. However, it also pushes to recommodify health care and to turn health into a terrain for capital accumulation through the selective privatization of health-related financial and "discretionary" services. The proposal implies large-scale experimentation and dismantling of public institutions which are the only alternative now accessible to the majority. It rejects health as a human need and a social right, and violates basic values by claiming that life and death decisions can be justly made by the market or through a cost-effectiveness formula.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Health Care and Public Health; Investing in Health (World Bank 1993 World Development Report); World Bank

Mesh:

Year:  1996        PMID: 8932599     DOI: 10.2190/PBX9-N89E-4QFE-046V

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Health Serv        ISSN: 0020-7314            Impact factor:   1.663


  8 in total

1.  Social medicine then and now: lessons from Latin America.

Authors:  H Waitzkin; C Iriart; A Estrada; S Lamadrid
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2001-10       Impact factor: 9.308

2.  The World Bank: global health or global harm?

Authors:  Anne-Emanuelle Birn; Klaudia Dmitrienko
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2005-06-16       Impact factor: 9.308

3.  Postneoliberal Public Health Care Reforms: Neoliberalism, Social Medicine, and Persistent Health Inequalities in Latin America.

Authors:  Christopher Hartmann
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2016-10-13       Impact factor: 9.308

4.  Competing health policies: insurance against universal public systems.

Authors:  Asa Ebba Cristina Laurell
Journal:  Rev Lat Am Enfermagem       Date:  2016-03-04

5.  Interrogating scarcity: how to think about 'resource-scarce settings'.

Authors:  Ted Schrecker
Journal:  Health Policy Plan       Date:  2012-08-16       Impact factor: 3.344

6.  For the children? A mixed methods analysis of World Bank structural adjustment loans, health projects, and infant mortality in Latin America.

Authors:  Shiri Noy
Journal:  Global Health       Date:  2021-01-06       Impact factor: 4.185

7.  New Bottle, Old Wine? Implications of the World Bank's Systematic Diagnostic Reports for the Rise of Noncommunicable Diseases in the Organization of Eastern Caribbean States.

Authors:  Kewoba Carter; Claudia Chaufan
Journal:  Int J Health Serv       Date:  2022-05-16       Impact factor: 1.851

8.  How is the discourse of performance-based financing shaped at the global level? A poststructural analysis.

Authors:  Lara Gautier; Manuela De Allegri; Valéry Ridde
Journal:  Global Health       Date:  2019-01-15       Impact factor: 4.185

  8 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.