HC Deb 05 April 1978 vol 947 cc129-30W
Mr. Lomas

asked the Secretary of State for Social Services what was the percentage of the gross national product spent on the National Health Service in the United Kingdom in each year from 1970 to the latest available date; and how this figure compares with other members of the European Economic Community and the United States of America.

Mr. Moyle

The National Health Service in the United Kingdom took, in current prices, the following proportions of the gross domestic product (GDP) at factor costs, which is the measure most readily available for these comparisons, in 1970 and subsequent years:

Percentage
1970 4.7
1971 4.7
1972 4.8
1973 4.7
1974 5.3
1975 5.7
1976 5.8
Expenditure on health care is not recorded on a strictly comparable basis in the national accounts of the various EEC countries, and there are widely varying definitions of "health care". There are therefore serious difficulties in expressing such expenditure as a proportion of GDP so as to allow meaningful comparisons to be made. However, the latest comparisons made by the OECD of the fraction of GDP spent on health indicate that, if United Kingdom spending is taken as 100, then around 1974 the picture was as follows:
Total Public and Private Health Expenditure Public Health Expenditure
United Kingdom 100 100
U.S.A. 142 65
Denmark N.A. 141
Netherlands 140 111
France 133 115
Germany 129 113
Ireland 119 117
Italy 115 113
Belgium 96 91
Luxembourg 77 N.A.