Ana Carolina Cordilha
Public Health Systems in the Age of Financialization
Lessons from the Center and the Periphery
Ana Carolina Cordilha
Public Health Systems in the Age of Financialization
Lessons from the Center and the Periphery
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In Public Health Systems in the Age of Financialization, Ana Carolina Cordilha unpacks policy shifts that have transformed public health systems into vehicles for financial speculation and capital accumulation. While it is commonly thought that these systems are being cut back in the period of financialization, the author shows that current changes in public health financing go far beyond budget cuts and privatization measures. She examines how public health systems are adopting financial instruments and participating in financial accumulation strategies, with harmful impacts on transparency,…mehr
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In Public Health Systems in the Age of Financialization, Ana Carolina Cordilha unpacks policy shifts that have transformed public health systems into vehicles for financial speculation and capital accumulation. While it is commonly thought that these systems are being cut back in the period of financialization, the author shows that current changes in public health financing go far beyond budget cuts and privatization measures. She examines how public health systems are adopting financial instruments and participating in financial accumulation strategies, with harmful impacts on transparency, democratic accountability, and health service provision. With an in-depth study of both the French and Brazilian systems, Cordilha explores the different ways in which this process unfolds in central and peripheral countries.
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Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Haymarket Books
- Seitenzahl: 314
- Erscheinungstermin: 6. August 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 440g
- ISBN-13: 9798888902431
- Artikelnr.: 69924305
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Haymarket Books
- Seitenzahl: 314
- Erscheinungstermin: 6. August 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 440g
- ISBN-13: 9798888902431
- Artikelnr.: 69924305
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Ana Carolina Cordilha teaches Quantitative Methods and Economic Development at Sorbonne Nouvelle University. She has several publications on financialization and social policy, including Financialisation and Public Health Systems: a new concept to examine ongoing reforms.
Acknowledgments
List of Figures and Tables
Acronyms
Introduction
Part 1
Financialization as a New Concept to Examine Public Health Systems Change
1 Financialization and Its Inroads into Public Policy
1 Finance and Its Workings
1.1 Conventional Views of Finance
1.2 The Heterodox Critique
1.3 The Academic Scholarship on Financialization
2 Together But Different: Financialization in Central and Peripheral
Countries
2.1 Financialization in France
2.2 Financialization in Brazil
3 Financialization and Social Provision
3.1 The Inroads of Finance in Areas of Social Provision
3.2 The Financialization of Social Policy
3.3 The Financialization of the State
3.4 Financialization and Central Governments: Changes in Public Debt
Management
3.5 Emerging Themes on State Financialization: Local Governments, Public
Investments, and Social Provision
2 Public Health Systems in Times of Financialization
1 Public Health Systems ( phs )
1.1 Reasons for State Intervention in Health Care
1.2 Defining Public Systems
1.3 Common Institutional Arrangements of phs
1.4 phs in Historical Perspective
2 Conventional Approaches to Assess Health Systems Change
2.1 Deconstructing the Notion of Privatization
2.2 Agents
2.3 Narratives
2.4 Theoretical Underpinnings
2.5 Impacts
3 Financialization in the Health Sector
3.1 The State of the Art of the Health Financialization Literature
3.2 Investment Platforms: a New Approach to Finance Global Health Policies
3.3 Ownership Restructuring: Reshaping the Landscape of Private Health
3.4 Financial Innovations: a Novel Strategy for Public and Non-profit
Agencies
3.5 Gaps in the Existing Research for the Public Sector
3.6 Financialization as a Distinctive Type of phs Change
3.7 Agents
3.8 Narratives
3.9 Theoretical Underpinnings
3.10 Different Paths, Same Driving Force: Austerity Policies
3.11 Impacts of Financialization
3.12 Bridging Concepts Together: Privatization as a Driver of
Financialization
3.13 Financialization as a Driver of Privatization
Part 2
From Theory to Practice: How Financialization Reshapes Public Health
Systems
3 The French System Pioneering Financialized Strategies in phs
1 Social Security and Public Health Care in France
1.1 The French System of Social Security
1.2 The French Public Health System: Assurance Maladie
1.3 The Trajectory Toward Universalization
1.4 The Path of Neoliberal Reforms in Assurance Maladie
1.5 Assurance Maladie’s Accounts in Perspective
2 Mechanisms of Financialization
2.1 Financialized Strategies for Long-Term Debt Management: the Social
Debt Amortization Fund
2.2 Contextualizing cades ’ Creation
2.3 Deconstructing cades ’ Strategy
2.4 cades in Numbers
2.5 Instruments and Costs
2.6 Investors and Intermediaries
2.7 State Support
2.8 Financialized Strategies for Short-Term Financing by the Central
Agency of Social Security
2.9 Contextualizing the Adoption of Financialized Practices by the Central
Agency
2.10 acoss ’ Financing Strategy in Numbers
2.11 Instruments and Costs
2.12 Investors and Intermediaries
2.13 State Support
2.14 Government Policies Toward Hospitals: Credit-Based Investment
Programs
2.15 The French Hospital Sector at a Glance
2.16 Bringing Hospitals and Banks Closer Together: a New Approach to
Finance Investments
2.17 Delving into the Credit-Based Financing Strategy
2.18 The Role of the State
2.19 Addendum: Public Hospitals Venturing into Financial Markets
2.20 Financing Conditions and Intermediaries
3 Taking Stock
4 The Brazilian System A Trajectory (Mis)led by Financialization
1 Social Security and Public Health Care in Brazil
1.1 The Brazilian Social Security System
1.2 The Brazilian Public Health System: Sistema Único de Saúde
1.3 The Quest to Consolidate Universal Health Care: Successes and
Drawbacks
1.4 The Public Health System Today
1.5 sus Accounts in Perspective
2 Mechanisms of Financialization
2.1 Public Health Revenues Feeding Financial Accumulation: Policies at the
Federal Level
2.2 The 1999 Monetary Policy Regime and Its Associated Fiscal Policy
Framework
2.3 Reinforcing the Macroeconomic Regime: Health Spending Rules
2.4 Backing the Macroeconomic Regime: Rules for Social Security Revenues
2.5 Data Analysis and Interpretation: Health and Financial Expenditures in
Perspective
2.6 The Role of Financial Institutions
2.7 Investing sus Revenues in Short-Term Financial Assets: Policies at the
Subnational Level
2.8 The Role of Health Funds
2.9 The Rio de Janeiro State Health Fund
2.10 The Federal District Health Fund
2.11 When the Financial System Overrides the Health System: Revenue
Retention Practices
2.12 Subsidized Credit Lines for sus Providers
2.13 sus and the Philanthropic Health Sector
2.14 Government Programs Connecting Philanthropic Hospitals and Banks
2.15 Consigned Credit for Philanthropic Health Establishments
2.16 The Bank-Based Strategy in Numbers
2.17 How Credit-Based Hospital Financing Serves the Financial Sector
2.18 Taking Stock
5 Uncovering the Hidden Costs of Financialized Public Health Insights from
Case Studies
1 Systematizing Results: Common Trends
2 Shared Trends, Unique Expressions: Contrasting Central and Peripheral
Experiences
3 A Broader View of Financialized Policies in phs and the Role of the
State
4 Impacts of Financialized Policies on the Foundational Principles of phs
Appendix Additional Information on Data Sources and Treatment
References
Index
List of Figures and Tables
Acronyms
Introduction
Part 1
Financialization as a New Concept to Examine Public Health Systems Change
1 Financialization and Its Inroads into Public Policy
1 Finance and Its Workings
1.1 Conventional Views of Finance
1.2 The Heterodox Critique
1.3 The Academic Scholarship on Financialization
2 Together But Different: Financialization in Central and Peripheral
Countries
2.1 Financialization in France
2.2 Financialization in Brazil
3 Financialization and Social Provision
3.1 The Inroads of Finance in Areas of Social Provision
3.2 The Financialization of Social Policy
3.3 The Financialization of the State
3.4 Financialization and Central Governments: Changes in Public Debt
Management
3.5 Emerging Themes on State Financialization: Local Governments, Public
Investments, and Social Provision
2 Public Health Systems in Times of Financialization
1 Public Health Systems ( phs )
1.1 Reasons for State Intervention in Health Care
1.2 Defining Public Systems
1.3 Common Institutional Arrangements of phs
1.4 phs in Historical Perspective
2 Conventional Approaches to Assess Health Systems Change
2.1 Deconstructing the Notion of Privatization
2.2 Agents
2.3 Narratives
2.4 Theoretical Underpinnings
2.5 Impacts
3 Financialization in the Health Sector
3.1 The State of the Art of the Health Financialization Literature
3.2 Investment Platforms: a New Approach to Finance Global Health Policies
3.3 Ownership Restructuring: Reshaping the Landscape of Private Health
3.4 Financial Innovations: a Novel Strategy for Public and Non-profit
Agencies
3.5 Gaps in the Existing Research for the Public Sector
3.6 Financialization as a Distinctive Type of phs Change
3.7 Agents
3.8 Narratives
3.9 Theoretical Underpinnings
3.10 Different Paths, Same Driving Force: Austerity Policies
3.11 Impacts of Financialization
3.12 Bridging Concepts Together: Privatization as a Driver of
Financialization
3.13 Financialization as a Driver of Privatization
Part 2
From Theory to Practice: How Financialization Reshapes Public Health
Systems
3 The French System Pioneering Financialized Strategies in phs
1 Social Security and Public Health Care in France
1.1 The French System of Social Security
1.2 The French Public Health System: Assurance Maladie
1.3 The Trajectory Toward Universalization
1.4 The Path of Neoliberal Reforms in Assurance Maladie
1.5 Assurance Maladie’s Accounts in Perspective
2 Mechanisms of Financialization
2.1 Financialized Strategies for Long-Term Debt Management: the Social
Debt Amortization Fund
2.2 Contextualizing cades ’ Creation
2.3 Deconstructing cades ’ Strategy
2.4 cades in Numbers
2.5 Instruments and Costs
2.6 Investors and Intermediaries
2.7 State Support
2.8 Financialized Strategies for Short-Term Financing by the Central
Agency of Social Security
2.9 Contextualizing the Adoption of Financialized Practices by the Central
Agency
2.10 acoss ’ Financing Strategy in Numbers
2.11 Instruments and Costs
2.12 Investors and Intermediaries
2.13 State Support
2.14 Government Policies Toward Hospitals: Credit-Based Investment
Programs
2.15 The French Hospital Sector at a Glance
2.16 Bringing Hospitals and Banks Closer Together: a New Approach to
Finance Investments
2.17 Delving into the Credit-Based Financing Strategy
2.18 The Role of the State
2.19 Addendum: Public Hospitals Venturing into Financial Markets
2.20 Financing Conditions and Intermediaries
3 Taking Stock
4 The Brazilian System A Trajectory (Mis)led by Financialization
1 Social Security and Public Health Care in Brazil
1.1 The Brazilian Social Security System
1.2 The Brazilian Public Health System: Sistema Único de Saúde
1.3 The Quest to Consolidate Universal Health Care: Successes and
Drawbacks
1.4 The Public Health System Today
1.5 sus Accounts in Perspective
2 Mechanisms of Financialization
2.1 Public Health Revenues Feeding Financial Accumulation: Policies at the
Federal Level
2.2 The 1999 Monetary Policy Regime and Its Associated Fiscal Policy
Framework
2.3 Reinforcing the Macroeconomic Regime: Health Spending Rules
2.4 Backing the Macroeconomic Regime: Rules for Social Security Revenues
2.5 Data Analysis and Interpretation: Health and Financial Expenditures in
Perspective
2.6 The Role of Financial Institutions
2.7 Investing sus Revenues in Short-Term Financial Assets: Policies at the
Subnational Level
2.8 The Role of Health Funds
2.9 The Rio de Janeiro State Health Fund
2.10 The Federal District Health Fund
2.11 When the Financial System Overrides the Health System: Revenue
Retention Practices
2.12 Subsidized Credit Lines for sus Providers
2.13 sus and the Philanthropic Health Sector
2.14 Government Programs Connecting Philanthropic Hospitals and Banks
2.15 Consigned Credit for Philanthropic Health Establishments
2.16 The Bank-Based Strategy in Numbers
2.17 How Credit-Based Hospital Financing Serves the Financial Sector
2.18 Taking Stock
5 Uncovering the Hidden Costs of Financialized Public Health Insights from
Case Studies
1 Systematizing Results: Common Trends
2 Shared Trends, Unique Expressions: Contrasting Central and Peripheral
Experiences
3 A Broader View of Financialized Policies in phs and the Role of the
State
4 Impacts of Financialized Policies on the Foundational Principles of phs
Appendix Additional Information on Data Sources and Treatment
References
Index
Acknowledgments
List of Figures and Tables
Acronyms
Introduction
Part 1
Financialization as a New Concept to Examine Public Health Systems Change
1 Financialization and Its Inroads into Public Policy
1 Finance and Its Workings
1.1 Conventional Views of Finance
1.2 The Heterodox Critique
1.3 The Academic Scholarship on Financialization
2 Together But Different: Financialization in Central and Peripheral
Countries
2.1 Financialization in France
2.2 Financialization in Brazil
3 Financialization and Social Provision
3.1 The Inroads of Finance in Areas of Social Provision
3.2 The Financialization of Social Policy
3.3 The Financialization of the State
3.4 Financialization and Central Governments: Changes in Public Debt
Management
3.5 Emerging Themes on State Financialization: Local Governments, Public
Investments, and Social Provision
2 Public Health Systems in Times of Financialization
1 Public Health Systems ( phs )
1.1 Reasons for State Intervention in Health Care
1.2 Defining Public Systems
1.3 Common Institutional Arrangements of phs
1.4 phs in Historical Perspective
2 Conventional Approaches to Assess Health Systems Change
2.1 Deconstructing the Notion of Privatization
2.2 Agents
2.3 Narratives
2.4 Theoretical Underpinnings
2.5 Impacts
3 Financialization in the Health Sector
3.1 The State of the Art of the Health Financialization Literature
3.2 Investment Platforms: a New Approach to Finance Global Health Policies
3.3 Ownership Restructuring: Reshaping the Landscape of Private Health
3.4 Financial Innovations: a Novel Strategy for Public and Non-profit
Agencies
3.5 Gaps in the Existing Research for the Public Sector
3.6 Financialization as a Distinctive Type of phs Change
3.7 Agents
3.8 Narratives
3.9 Theoretical Underpinnings
3.10 Different Paths, Same Driving Force: Austerity Policies
3.11 Impacts of Financialization
3.12 Bridging Concepts Together: Privatization as a Driver of
Financialization
3.13 Financialization as a Driver of Privatization
Part 2
From Theory to Practice: How Financialization Reshapes Public Health
Systems
3 The French System Pioneering Financialized Strategies in phs
1 Social Security and Public Health Care in France
1.1 The French System of Social Security
1.2 The French Public Health System: Assurance Maladie
1.3 The Trajectory Toward Universalization
1.4 The Path of Neoliberal Reforms in Assurance Maladie
1.5 Assurance Maladie’s Accounts in Perspective
2 Mechanisms of Financialization
2.1 Financialized Strategies for Long-Term Debt Management: the Social
Debt Amortization Fund
2.2 Contextualizing cades ’ Creation
2.3 Deconstructing cades ’ Strategy
2.4 cades in Numbers
2.5 Instruments and Costs
2.6 Investors and Intermediaries
2.7 State Support
2.8 Financialized Strategies for Short-Term Financing by the Central
Agency of Social Security
2.9 Contextualizing the Adoption of Financialized Practices by the Central
Agency
2.10 acoss ’ Financing Strategy in Numbers
2.11 Instruments and Costs
2.12 Investors and Intermediaries
2.13 State Support
2.14 Government Policies Toward Hospitals: Credit-Based Investment
Programs
2.15 The French Hospital Sector at a Glance
2.16 Bringing Hospitals and Banks Closer Together: a New Approach to
Finance Investments
2.17 Delving into the Credit-Based Financing Strategy
2.18 The Role of the State
2.19 Addendum: Public Hospitals Venturing into Financial Markets
2.20 Financing Conditions and Intermediaries
3 Taking Stock
4 The Brazilian System A Trajectory (Mis)led by Financialization
1 Social Security and Public Health Care in Brazil
1.1 The Brazilian Social Security System
1.2 The Brazilian Public Health System: Sistema Único de Saúde
1.3 The Quest to Consolidate Universal Health Care: Successes and
Drawbacks
1.4 The Public Health System Today
1.5 sus Accounts in Perspective
2 Mechanisms of Financialization
2.1 Public Health Revenues Feeding Financial Accumulation: Policies at the
Federal Level
2.2 The 1999 Monetary Policy Regime and Its Associated Fiscal Policy
Framework
2.3 Reinforcing the Macroeconomic Regime: Health Spending Rules
2.4 Backing the Macroeconomic Regime: Rules for Social Security Revenues
2.5 Data Analysis and Interpretation: Health and Financial Expenditures in
Perspective
2.6 The Role of Financial Institutions
2.7 Investing sus Revenues in Short-Term Financial Assets: Policies at the
Subnational Level
2.8 The Role of Health Funds
2.9 The Rio de Janeiro State Health Fund
2.10 The Federal District Health Fund
2.11 When the Financial System Overrides the Health System: Revenue
Retention Practices
2.12 Subsidized Credit Lines for sus Providers
2.13 sus and the Philanthropic Health Sector
2.14 Government Programs Connecting Philanthropic Hospitals and Banks
2.15 Consigned Credit for Philanthropic Health Establishments
2.16 The Bank-Based Strategy in Numbers
2.17 How Credit-Based Hospital Financing Serves the Financial Sector
2.18 Taking Stock
5 Uncovering the Hidden Costs of Financialized Public Health Insights from
Case Studies
1 Systematizing Results: Common Trends
2 Shared Trends, Unique Expressions: Contrasting Central and Peripheral
Experiences
3 A Broader View of Financialized Policies in phs and the Role of the
State
4 Impacts of Financialized Policies on the Foundational Principles of phs
Appendix Additional Information on Data Sources and Treatment
References
Index
List of Figures and Tables
Acronyms
Introduction
Part 1
Financialization as a New Concept to Examine Public Health Systems Change
1 Financialization and Its Inroads into Public Policy
1 Finance and Its Workings
1.1 Conventional Views of Finance
1.2 The Heterodox Critique
1.3 The Academic Scholarship on Financialization
2 Together But Different: Financialization in Central and Peripheral
Countries
2.1 Financialization in France
2.2 Financialization in Brazil
3 Financialization and Social Provision
3.1 The Inroads of Finance in Areas of Social Provision
3.2 The Financialization of Social Policy
3.3 The Financialization of the State
3.4 Financialization and Central Governments: Changes in Public Debt
Management
3.5 Emerging Themes on State Financialization: Local Governments, Public
Investments, and Social Provision
2 Public Health Systems in Times of Financialization
1 Public Health Systems ( phs )
1.1 Reasons for State Intervention in Health Care
1.2 Defining Public Systems
1.3 Common Institutional Arrangements of phs
1.4 phs in Historical Perspective
2 Conventional Approaches to Assess Health Systems Change
2.1 Deconstructing the Notion of Privatization
2.2 Agents
2.3 Narratives
2.4 Theoretical Underpinnings
2.5 Impacts
3 Financialization in the Health Sector
3.1 The State of the Art of the Health Financialization Literature
3.2 Investment Platforms: a New Approach to Finance Global Health Policies
3.3 Ownership Restructuring: Reshaping the Landscape of Private Health
3.4 Financial Innovations: a Novel Strategy for Public and Non-profit
Agencies
3.5 Gaps in the Existing Research for the Public Sector
3.6 Financialization as a Distinctive Type of phs Change
3.7 Agents
3.8 Narratives
3.9 Theoretical Underpinnings
3.10 Different Paths, Same Driving Force: Austerity Policies
3.11 Impacts of Financialization
3.12 Bridging Concepts Together: Privatization as a Driver of
Financialization
3.13 Financialization as a Driver of Privatization
Part 2
From Theory to Practice: How Financialization Reshapes Public Health
Systems
3 The French System Pioneering Financialized Strategies in phs
1 Social Security and Public Health Care in France
1.1 The French System of Social Security
1.2 The French Public Health System: Assurance Maladie
1.3 The Trajectory Toward Universalization
1.4 The Path of Neoliberal Reforms in Assurance Maladie
1.5 Assurance Maladie’s Accounts in Perspective
2 Mechanisms of Financialization
2.1 Financialized Strategies for Long-Term Debt Management: the Social
Debt Amortization Fund
2.2 Contextualizing cades ’ Creation
2.3 Deconstructing cades ’ Strategy
2.4 cades in Numbers
2.5 Instruments and Costs
2.6 Investors and Intermediaries
2.7 State Support
2.8 Financialized Strategies for Short-Term Financing by the Central
Agency of Social Security
2.9 Contextualizing the Adoption of Financialized Practices by the Central
Agency
2.10 acoss ’ Financing Strategy in Numbers
2.11 Instruments and Costs
2.12 Investors and Intermediaries
2.13 State Support
2.14 Government Policies Toward Hospitals: Credit-Based Investment
Programs
2.15 The French Hospital Sector at a Glance
2.16 Bringing Hospitals and Banks Closer Together: a New Approach to
Finance Investments
2.17 Delving into the Credit-Based Financing Strategy
2.18 The Role of the State
2.19 Addendum: Public Hospitals Venturing into Financial Markets
2.20 Financing Conditions and Intermediaries
3 Taking Stock
4 The Brazilian System A Trajectory (Mis)led by Financialization
1 Social Security and Public Health Care in Brazil
1.1 The Brazilian Social Security System
1.2 The Brazilian Public Health System: Sistema Único de Saúde
1.3 The Quest to Consolidate Universal Health Care: Successes and
Drawbacks
1.4 The Public Health System Today
1.5 sus Accounts in Perspective
2 Mechanisms of Financialization
2.1 Public Health Revenues Feeding Financial Accumulation: Policies at the
Federal Level
2.2 The 1999 Monetary Policy Regime and Its Associated Fiscal Policy
Framework
2.3 Reinforcing the Macroeconomic Regime: Health Spending Rules
2.4 Backing the Macroeconomic Regime: Rules for Social Security Revenues
2.5 Data Analysis and Interpretation: Health and Financial Expenditures in
Perspective
2.6 The Role of Financial Institutions
2.7 Investing sus Revenues in Short-Term Financial Assets: Policies at the
Subnational Level
2.8 The Role of Health Funds
2.9 The Rio de Janeiro State Health Fund
2.10 The Federal District Health Fund
2.11 When the Financial System Overrides the Health System: Revenue
Retention Practices
2.12 Subsidized Credit Lines for sus Providers
2.13 sus and the Philanthropic Health Sector
2.14 Government Programs Connecting Philanthropic Hospitals and Banks
2.15 Consigned Credit for Philanthropic Health Establishments
2.16 The Bank-Based Strategy in Numbers
2.17 How Credit-Based Hospital Financing Serves the Financial Sector
2.18 Taking Stock
5 Uncovering the Hidden Costs of Financialized Public Health Insights from
Case Studies
1 Systematizing Results: Common Trends
2 Shared Trends, Unique Expressions: Contrasting Central and Peripheral
Experiences
3 A Broader View of Financialized Policies in phs and the Role of the
State
4 Impacts of Financialized Policies on the Foundational Principles of phs
Appendix Additional Information on Data Sources and Treatment
References
Index