March 2017
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14 Reads
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10 Citations
Brazil’s experience in building a relatively successful universal health system was made possible by the combination of political incentives to serve poor constituencies, which made it politically sustainable; fiscal sustainability and the great extractive capacity of the Brazilian state; and the institutional capacity to run a complex decentralized system. This chapter argues that Brazil’s Unified Health System (SUS) has faced two important challenges: finding new financial resources for the sector and promoting efficiency gains. Finding new sources of funding has involved unprecedented political costs despite the increasing saliency of public health in the public agenda. Efficiency gains are also unlikely to occur in the near future due to the recent deterioration of public sector management since 2012 and other specific factors, including the judicialization of health care.