Compared to other industrialized countries, the U.S. spends most of all on health care. Nonetheless, the U.S. ranks relatively
low on health care indicators. This paradox has been already known for decades. For example, the turning point comparing the
U.S. and Canada was in 1972. Health expenditure as a percentage of GDP was higher in Canada than in the USA from 1960 until
1972. Since 1972 expenditure on health care has been higher in the U.S. than in Canada (OECD 2005a, Health data 2005, fourteenth
OECD electronic database on health systems, date of release June 2005, last update 04/26/2005). The present study integrates
the dispersed literature on spending and health care rankings and adds some statistical analysis to these studies. The evaluation
of different factors influencing health care expenditure in the U.S. relative to other countries is restricted to a comparison
with Canada. The U.S. and Canada are two countries that are sufficiently similar to make comparisons useful. The comparison
of factors influencing health care expenditure in the U.S. and Canada in 2002 reveals that health care expenditure in the
U.S. is higher than in Canada mainly due to administration costs, Baumol’s cost disease and pharmaceutical prices. It is not
primarily inefficiency in health care production but the dominant prevalence for free choice and own responsibility that explains
the paradox of high expenditure on health care and low ranking on health care indicators.
Keywords Health care expenditure - United States - Canada
JEL Classifications I10 - I12