China | Coverage that counted

An old health insurance scheme in China may have saved millions

But there is still plenty of room for improvement

An ambulance  on a country road in Jiangxi Province, China.
Image: Getty Images

In a country of 1.4bn people, even small improvements in health care can have a big impact. That appears to have been the case with the New Co-operative Medical Scheme (NCMS), a health-insurance plan for rural Chinese that was launched in 2003 and folded into a more comprehensive programme in 2013. Though it is perhaps best known for being stingy, the NCMS saved millions of lives, according to a new working paper by Jonathan Gruber of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Junjian Yi of Peking University and Mengyun Lin of Xiamen University.

This article appeared in the China section of the print edition under the headline “Coverage that counted”

From the September 2nd 2023 edition

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