Healthcare expenditure refers to the current operating expenditures in healthcare, which includes healthcare goods and services and excludes capital investments in buildings and equipment.
The figure below shows the healthcare expenditure in current US dollars, in billions, for each of the 10 countries from year 2011 to 2015.
Similarly, the graph below shows the healthcare expenditure for each of the countries as a percentage of their GDP. The year selected were from 2011 to 2015.
The bubble charts show the correlation between GDP per capita and healthcare expenditure per capita. The first bubble chart uses the data for 10 countries for year 2011, whereas the second bubble chart uses the data for year 2015.
The growth in healthcare expenditure can be calculated as the difference of the spending between the years. The first two graphs display the trend in healthcare expenditure growth from 2011 to 2015 for each country. The Geo chart shows the percentage of healthcare spending growth for each country from 2011 to 2015.
The United States have been removed from the time series plot below for the ease of readings of other countries.
Finally, the Geo chart below shows the percentage growth in healthcare spending for each of the 10 countries. Hovering over the map will display the data. The range of the growth are about 71 percent (positive growth) to about -27 percent (negative growth).