Health Earmarks and Health Taxes : What Do We Know?

Earmarking means taking all or a portion of total revenue from a tax or group of taxes and setting it aside or ‘protecting’ it for a designated expenditure purpose. Earmarking practices vary from ‘hard’ to ‘soft,’ and are associated with different...

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Main Authors: Ozer, Ceren, Bloom, Danielle, Martinez Valle, Adolfo, Banzon, Eduardo, Mandeville, Kate, Paul, Jeremias, Blecher, Evan, Sparkes, Susan, Chhabra, Sheena
Format: Brief
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/415911607500858658/Health-Earmarks-and-Health-Taxes-What-Do-We-Know
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/34947
id okr-10986-34947
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-349472021-04-23T14:02:12Z Health Earmarks and Health Taxes : What Do We Know? Ozer, Ceren Bloom, Danielle Martinez Valle, Adolfo Banzon, Eduardo Mandeville, Kate Paul, Jeremias Blecher, Evan Sparkes, Susan Chhabra, Sheena HEALTH TAX EARMARKS TAX REVENUE PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE FISCAL TRENDS TOBACCO TAX Earmarking means taking all or a portion of total revenue from a tax or group of taxes and setting it aside or ‘protecting’ it for a designated expenditure purpose. Earmarking practices vary from ‘hard’ to ‘soft,’ and are associated with different levels of fiscal risk. At least 80, and likely more, countries earmark for health. However, earmarking is unlikely to bring a sustained net increase in revenue due to offsetting and can create rigidities and inefficiencies. If allocations fail to match priorities or if a tax can make the priority more politically acceptable, soft earmarks that are closer to standard budget processes may be useful in the short term. The primary intent of “health taxes” is to curb unhealthy behaviors that affect population health and can strain health systems. Health taxes can generate revenue without compromising equity, and their revenues can be earmarked, but they do not by design net more money for health. In the context of fiscal constraints (e.g., with COVID-19), heath taxes may provide an overall source of revenue for governments and help manage disease burden and fiscal pressure on the health system by reducing risk factors for COVID-19. Soft earmarks on health taxes may also help inject short-term funding into the health sector, if the appropriate public financial management safeguards are in place. 2020-12-17T17:49:09Z 2020-12-17T17:49:09Z 2020-12 Brief http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/415911607500858658/Health-Earmarks-and-Health-Taxes-What-Do-We-Know http://hdl.handle.net/10986/34947 English Health, Nutrition and Population Knowledge Brief; CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Brief
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic HEALTH TAX EARMARKS
TAX REVENUE
PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE
FISCAL TRENDS
TOBACCO TAX
spellingShingle HEALTH TAX EARMARKS
TAX REVENUE
PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE
FISCAL TRENDS
TOBACCO TAX
Ozer, Ceren
Bloom, Danielle
Martinez Valle, Adolfo
Banzon, Eduardo
Mandeville, Kate
Paul, Jeremias
Blecher, Evan
Sparkes, Susan
Chhabra, Sheena
Health Earmarks and Health Taxes : What Do We Know?
relation Health, Nutrition and Population Knowledge Brief;
description Earmarking means taking all or a portion of total revenue from a tax or group of taxes and setting it aside or ‘protecting’ it for a designated expenditure purpose. Earmarking practices vary from ‘hard’ to ‘soft,’ and are associated with different levels of fiscal risk. At least 80, and likely more, countries earmark for health. However, earmarking is unlikely to bring a sustained net increase in revenue due to offsetting and can create rigidities and inefficiencies. If allocations fail to match priorities or if a tax can make the priority more politically acceptable, soft earmarks that are closer to standard budget processes may be useful in the short term. The primary intent of “health taxes” is to curb unhealthy behaviors that affect population health and can strain health systems. Health taxes can generate revenue without compromising equity, and their revenues can be earmarked, but they do not by design net more money for health. In the context of fiscal constraints (e.g., with COVID-19), heath taxes may provide an overall source of revenue for governments and help manage disease burden and fiscal pressure on the health system by reducing risk factors for COVID-19. Soft earmarks on health taxes may also help inject short-term funding into the health sector, if the appropriate public financial management safeguards are in place.
format Brief
author Ozer, Ceren
Bloom, Danielle
Martinez Valle, Adolfo
Banzon, Eduardo
Mandeville, Kate
Paul, Jeremias
Blecher, Evan
Sparkes, Susan
Chhabra, Sheena
author_facet Ozer, Ceren
Bloom, Danielle
Martinez Valle, Adolfo
Banzon, Eduardo
Mandeville, Kate
Paul, Jeremias
Blecher, Evan
Sparkes, Susan
Chhabra, Sheena
author_sort Ozer, Ceren
title Health Earmarks and Health Taxes : What Do We Know?
title_short Health Earmarks and Health Taxes : What Do We Know?
title_full Health Earmarks and Health Taxes : What Do We Know?
title_fullStr Health Earmarks and Health Taxes : What Do We Know?
title_full_unstemmed Health Earmarks and Health Taxes : What Do We Know?
title_sort health earmarks and health taxes : what do we know?
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2020
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/415911607500858658/Health-Earmarks-and-Health-Taxes-What-Do-We-Know
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/34947
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