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    Home»Economy»The G7 Nation Spending The Least On Healthcare
    Economy 5 Mins Read

    The G7 Nation Spending The Least On Healthcare

    Economy 5 Mins Read
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    One European nation consistently ranks last in healthcare spending among the G7 nations, and 14th among the European Union member states—Italy. The underfunded system has led to a rapid decline in services, a shortage of family practitioners, excessive wait times in emergency rooms, and lengthy procedure delays.  Regional inequalities in care are extremely prominent. One in 10 citizens or 5.8 million people have been forced to pay out of pocket for healthcare when their taxes should cover the expense, leading many to question where their taxes are being directed.

    Italy allocated 6.3% of GDP to health services in 2024, well beneath the OECD (7.1%) and EU (6.9%) averages. The gap in per capita spending with other EU members hit €43 billion, and now, health providers are sounding the alarms that a massive structure reform must occur to support the structural integrity of the nation’s healthcare system.

    “In Europe, Italy leads the poorest countries in per capita public spending: it is ahead of only a few Eastern and Southern European countries, given that the Czech Republic, Slovenia, and Spain invest more than us.” Until 2011, per capita healthcare spending in Italy was in line with the European average; then, due to cuts and defunding implemented by all governments, the gap gradually widened, reaching $430 in 2019. The gap widened further during the pandemic, when other countries invested significantly more than Italy; the trend was confirmed in 2023, with spending remaining stable in Italy, and in 2024, when the increase was lower than the average for other European countries,” Nino Cartabellotta, President of the Gimbe Foundation, commented.

    Per capita spending on health care was $3,835 compared to the OECD average of $4,625. Other EU nations spend around $4,689 per capita and have seen a surge in investments in recent years. Germany, for example, nearly doubled its spending from $4,245 per capita to $8,080.

    There is a blatant difference in care across Italy and the North-South divide. Milan is known for hosting the best hospitals and providers in the nation. Everyone is entitled by law to the same “Essential Levels of Assistance” (LEA), but in actuality, regions with fewer resources to guarantee the LEA face massive shortfalls in services.

    It has been this way for over 100 years, where people from Southern regions often travel to the north for better service, shorter wait times, better doctors, and adequate staffing. Italy claims it has universal healthcare but then invests primarily in the northern regions who have more to provide in taxes. The difference is so profound that Southern Italians face higher levels of cancer and chronic illness and have a higher mortality rate than those living in the north.  One study published by the National Library of Medicine found that Italy had the highest disparity in regional care among all European nations.

    If health were privatized, the matter may seem a bit more leveled, but poorer regions depend on the government for funding and the wealthier regions are forced to pay for those with less. The northern regions, like Lombardy, can cover up to 40% of their healthcare costs through regional taxes, whereas lower-income regions can only offer up to 5%. The corporate tax on productive activities (IRAP) varies by region as well. Half of national healthcare funding is derived from VAT taxes that are then redistributed among the regions. There are surcharges and taxes on nearly everything, and no one is quite certain how the government is allocating these funds since it is not going into health care.

    Italy claims to share the same model as the United Kingdom with universal healthcare. The UK continues to pour into the NHS but it is still extremely flawed by design. I personally know someone in London who dialed for an ambulance when his relative broke their leg. Emergency responders told him they were unable to send an ambulance and suggested he find an alternative mode of transportation.

    Politicians love to sell the idea of universal healthcare as a human right, but do not factor in the complexities of funding. On the surface, who wouldn’t want free medical care? The problem is government never manages anything efficiently. Once bureaucrats get involved, costs explode, quality declines, and corruption takes hold. These universal systems are collapsing with wait lists stretching for months if not years and doctors fleeing for better pay abroad. Rather than reform, governments either cut services to ration care or dump an excessive amount of money in the system only to see the same result with more money leading to higher charges.

    Universal healthcare, like every socialist policy, ultimately leads to shortages, rationing, and higher taxes. It is not about “caring for people” but about expanding government power. The only sustainable system must be built on free markets and innovation. Political corruption and lobbying have ruined healthcare in the United States as hospitals, big pharma, and insurance companies scheme to charge asinine fees with no checks and balances. If you fall ill in America, you’ll lose your life savings, and if you fall ill in Europe, you’ll potentially lose your life.



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