Modelling an entitlement to long-term care services for older people in Europe: projections for long-term care expenditure to 2050

Linda Pickard, Adelina Comas-Herrera, Joan Costa-Font, Cristiano Gori, Alessandra di Maio, ConcepciĆ³ Patxot, Alessandro Pozzi, Heinz Rothgang, Raphael Wittenberg (2007)

Please note: this is a legacy publication from CPEC (formely PSSRU at LSE).

Journal of European Social Policy 17 1 33-48

https://doi.org/10.1177/0958928707071879

Available online: 1 February 2007

Abstract
As the numbers of older people rise in Europe, the importance of long-term care services in terms of numbers of users and expenditures can be expected to grow. This article examines the implications for expenditure in four countries of a national entitlement to long-tem care services for all older people, based on assessed dependency. It is based on a European Commission-funded cross-national study, which makes projections to 2050 of long-term care expenditure in Germany, Italy, Spain and the UK. The policy option investigated is based on the German long-term care insurance scheme, which embodies the principle of an entitlement on uniform national criteria to long-term care benefits. The research models this key principle of the German system in the other three participating countries, with respect to home care services. The study finds that, if all moderately/severely dependent older people receive an entitlement to formal (in-kind) home care, the impact on expenditure could be considerable, but would vary greatly between countries. The impact on long-term care expenditure is found to be the least in Germany, where there is already an entitlement to benefits; and the greatest in Spain, where reliance on informal care is widespread. This article discusses the policy implications of these results.