09/08/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 09/08/2025 06:42
Health financing is how money is collected, managed, and spent to pay for health services. Effective and strategic health financing helps people access the care they need without facing financial hardship, improves health for everyone, and builds strong, resilient health systems. Effective health financing ensures hospitals and clinics can run well, helps more people afford treatment, and supports countries in reaching universal health coverage (UHC).
Learn how the World Bank is improving lives with quality, affordable health servicesEfficient health financing is essential to reach the World Bank Group goal of helping countries deliver quality, affordable health services to 1.5 billion people by 2030 and its overall mission to end extreme poverty and promote shared prosperity on a livable planet.Efforts to redesign benefits packages, align and execute health budgets, or change the way healthcare providers are paid, among other elements of health financing policies, can create jobs and improve lives. Health is a fundamental component of human capital -the knowledge, skills, and health that enable individuals to realize their potential in society. Good health contributes to economic growth and shared prosperity.
The COVID-19 pandemic and global crises exposed and deepened vulnerabilities in health systems and public finances. Today, over half the world's population is not fully covered by essential health services, and one in four people face financial hardship due to out-of-pocket payments in seeking health care. Fiscal space for health, in part due to debt distress, will likely remain constrained for years to come in many low-and middle-income countries. At the same time, demands on health systems, from climate-related shocks to population aging, are growing.
Advancing policies in health financing is more urgent than ever to reignite progress toward UHC, amidst volatility in external assistance and constraints due to competing demands on public finances. The World Bank helps countries develop strategic health financing policies by coordinating health and public finances, and optimizing both domestic and external resources. As a leading multilateral development bank, it provides leveraged on-budget financing to support sustainable national health goals, guided by country-led strategies and informed by local engagement and global expertise.
The World Bank plays a leading role in producing relevant global knowledge, through initiatives such as the Government Resources and Projections for Health (GRPH) report series (previous known as From Double Shock to Double Recovery) and Disease Control Priorities (DCP). Furthermore, the Bank delivers capacity-building, supports country operations with just-in-time analytics and technical assistance, and partners across sectors to help countries strengthen health financing.
To deliver on its goal of supporting countries to provide quality, affordable health services to 1.5 billion people by 2030, the Bank is leveraging its comparative advantages: deep country engagement, customized and appropriate financing instruments, and global convening power. Leveraging its unique position, the Bank brings cross-sectoral expertise in health financing and engages comprehensively with health and finance ministries on key issues such as fiscal policy, public financial management, decentralization, and social protection. The Bank also brings its multisectoral lens in addressing social determinants of health including policies outside the health sector.
Supporting governments, the World Bank analyzes health financing through a set of core questions:
Resource mobilization for health focuses on health spending levels and funding sources. Reliable public financing is essential for sustainable health systems, though many countries rely on development assistance. Fiscal policies such as taxes and subsidies can impact health by influencing the consumption of harmful goods such as tobacco or fossil fuels. The World Bank also works with other development partners by cofinancing health projects, and engages in analytical and operational work on health taxes, including with the World Bank's Global Tax Program.
Financial protection refers to the ability to protect households against the hardship of out-of-pocket health payments which can empoverish prople. The World Bank in partnership with the World Health Organization publishes the biennial Global Monitoring Report which tracks financial hardship. Advancing financial protection requires efficient pooling of public resources. The World Bank documents best practices and responds to country demand for practical, implementation-focused support to improve the reach and effectiveness of health insurance schemes.
Allocation and purchasing refers to how financial resources are distributed and spent. Once decisions have been made about which health services to cover, allocations must be aligned to enable their delivery where needed. Strategic purchasing ensures value for money in paying providers. The World Bank offers expert guidance and tailored support such as Designing and Implementing Health Care Provider Payment Systems and the Disease Control Priorities 4th edition. It also engages the private sector to expand service delivery, strengthen local medical manufacturing and supply chains, including with the IFC.
Public Financial Management (PFM) supports effective public spending on health by improving the transparency of budgetary processes, reducing the fragmentation of public funding flows, and by enhacing the autonomy of public providers and the capacity of all public institutions to manage health programs and deliver services. Recent global knowledge products published by the Bank include the Budget Execution in Health: From Bottlenecks to Solutions, in collaboration with WHO, as well as the FinHealth tool, a diagnostic framework designed to identify PFM bottlenecks for health service delivery.
Health financing must be holistic integrated in conversations about how systems deal with aging, noncommunicable diseases, fund and deploy human resources for health or digital health strategies. The Bank's cross-cutting work on health financing also includes:
The World Bank Group partners with leading global organizations to strengthen health financing and support countries toward universal health coverage. Key partners include the World Health Organization, UNICEF, Gavi, the Global Fund to Fight Aids, Tuberculosis, and Malaria, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the International Monetary Fund. and the OECD.
The World Bank Group has supported countries in advancing wide-ranging health financing reforms. These engagements combine financing, technical assistance, and policy dialogue to raise domestic resources for health. Based on the context, they help reduce out-of-pocket spending, expand social and financial protection, increase efficiency and value for money and institutions - complementing broader health policies to achieve universal health coverage.
Colombia, with World Bank support, has successfully expanded its use of health taxes to both reduce consumption of harmful products and mobilize domestic resources. Health taxes include excise taxes for tobacco, alcohol, and sugar-sweetened beverages (SSBs). For this work, Colombia leveraged a series of Development Policy Operations (DPOs) between 2017 and 2025 and received technical help to design and implement these excise taxes. Between 2019 and 2022, the share of children aged 2-17 drinking at least one sugary drink dropped from 24% to 18%. Tax revenues are expected to reach 0.2% of GDP by 2025.
In Morocco, a major health financing reform supported by policy dialogue, technical assistance and Development Policy Financing from the World Bank has expanded compulsory health insurance nationwide. By March 2025, coverage reached 75% of the population. The reform replaced a fragmented system and gives the poorest people equal access to benefits, including private services. Additional changes centralized insurance management under the National Social Security Fund and created new regulatory agencies to improve quality, equity, and transparency.
In Cambodia, the government aims to reduce financial hardship and to cut the share of out-of-pocket (OOP) health expenditures from 60% to 35% by 2035. The World Bank is providing technical and analytical support to develop an action plan to reduce OOP expenditure, conduct surveys to monitor the financial burden and foregone care among beneficiaries of the Health Equity Fund (HEF). The World Bank is also supporting a study on the role of private pharmacies, helps develop a strategic framework to engage private service providers through insurance contracting and strengthens the management of the HEF.
In Egypt, after the 2011 revolution, the World Bank supported a dialogue around inequalities and social justice in health which eventually culminated in the launch of the Universal Health Insurance Law (UHIL) in 2018. The transformative Law mandates health insurance for all Egyptians and re-organizes the health sector to deliver its benefits nationwide. The World Bank is supporting this ambitious UHIS reform of the Government of Egypt with a project and advisory services to increase the coverage of health insurance and strengthen UHIS-related processes and institutions, The IFC also supports this effort by helping to set up contracts with private providers and by investing in hospitals and services.
In Côte d'Ivoire, the national health insurance scheme quickly grew to cover 68% of the population in less than two years (2023-2024), thanks to government leadership and World Bank support. Daily enrollment rose from 200 to over 30,000 using decentralized, biometric, and mobile systems. Mandatory enrollment and the introduction of a social security number are now widely used. World Bank projects support the roll-out of performance-based financing across all districts and facilities expanding rural coverage and lower fees in urban areas. The surge in enrollments in the health insurance scheme has already resulted in a fourfold increase in the utilization of health services, particularly in rural areas. Digital tools were added to many health centers, new jobs created for young people, and subsidies introduced to encourage informal workers to join the insurance scheme. The World Bank Group is also helping create a public-private partnership for diagnostic services.
In Uganda, World Bank financing has helped more than quadruple the government's financing for local health services - from $70 million per year in 2017 to over $300 million in 2024 - despite a period of severe fiscal stress. A $190 million program of the International Development Association (IDA) helped leverage the budget needed, with every $1 from the Bank bringing $6 more from the government. The number of local governments meeting health workforce standards rose from 37% to 65% and 312 health facilities were improved. Around 3.3 million people now get quality health services annually. The program also improved the management of resources and their allocation in line with needs, illustrating overall how Public Finance Management matters for service delivery.