Fortune USA 201901-02

(Chris Devlin) #1

LAST BYTE


70

72

74

76

78

80

82

84

0 2,000 4,000 6,000 8,000 $10,000

1970


LIF

E^ E

XP

EC

TA

NC

Y

HEALTH SPENDING

70

72

74

76

78

80

82

84

0 2,000 4,000 6,000 8,000 $10,000

LIF

E^ E

XP

EC

TA

NC

Y

HEALTH SPENDING

1985


70

72

74

76

78

80

82

84

0 2,000 4,000 6,000 8,000 $10,000

LIF

E^ E

XP

EC

TA

NC

Y

HEALTH SPENDING

70

72

74

76

78

80

82

84

0 2,000 4,000 6,000 8,000 $10,000

LIF

E^ E

XP

EC

TA

NC

Y

HEALTH SPENDING

2000 2016


ITALY U.K. JAPAN FRANCE CANADA GERMANY U.S.

CORRELATION BETWEEN HEALTH SPENDING AND LIFE EXPECTANCY IN THE G7 COUNTRIES
YEARLY PER CAPITA GOVERNMENT AND HOUSEHOLD HEALTH EXPENDITURE (IN 2010 INTERNATIONAL DOLLARS, ADJUSTED FOR INFLATION)

U.S.
EXPENDITURE
PER CAPITA:
$8,933
LIFE EXPECTANCY
AT BIRTH:
78.6 YEARS

1970 TO

1970 TO 1970 TO

96
FORTUNE.COM// JA N.1 .19


IMAGINE YOU’RE A STOCK ANALYSTstudying the big companies in a given industry. As you sift through the financials, you discover that one
company spends twice what its rivals spend on operations, but its performance badly trails the entire group’s. Is that the stock you’d
slap a “buy” rating on? Probably not. And yet Americans keep investing in the laggard enterprise known as U.S. health care. Annual
premiums for employer-sponsored family health plans have jumped 55% since 2008, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation. Life
expectancy, meanwhile, has barely budged. Activist investors may want to call for a change in management. —CLIFTON LEAF

UNDERPERFORMING ASSET


SOURCES: OECD; UNIVERSITY OFOXFORD. NOTE: NO CONSISTENT DATA FOR ITALY GRAPHICS BYNICOLAS RAPP
UNTIL 1988; LAST FRAME SHOWS 2015 DATA(MOST RECENT) FOR FRANCE.
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