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How will population ageing affect health expenditure trends in New Zealand and what are the implications if people age in good health?

Economics of Healthy and Active Ageing

Overview

Population ageing presents economic, fiscal and societal challenges for countries around the world. Some of the predicted consequences of population ageing are based on an assumption that as people grow older, their health and productivity will inevitably decline. However, older people can be quite diverse in their health and functional abilities and, importantly, there is a role for policy to prevent these adverse outcomes from occurring as populations age.

Building on findings from the Economics of Healthy and Active Ageing series, the European Observatory on Health Systems and Policies, in collaboration with the WHO Centre for Health Development (WHO Kobe Centre) and the WHO Regional Office for the Western Pacific, carried out a series of analyses on population ageing for the Western Pacific Region. The Western Pacific Region has one of the largest and fastest growing older populations, hosting over a third of the world’s population aged 65 and above; this number is expected to double by 2050.

See other volumes in the series:

WHO Team
European Observatory on Health Systems and Policies
Editors
European Observatory on Health Systems and Policies
Number of pages
16
Reference numbers
ISBN: 1997-8073
WHO Reference Number: WHO/EURO:2020-1712-41463-56529

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