| Dokumendiregister | Rahandusministeerium |
| Viit | 11-4.1/5587-1 |
| Registreeritud | 29.12.2025 |
| Sünkroonitud | 02.01.2026 |
| Liik | Sissetulev kiri |
| Funktsioon | 11 RAHVUSVAHELINE SUHTLEMINE JA KOOSTÖÖ |
| Sari | 11-4.1 Rahvusvahelise koostöö korraldamisega seotud kirjavahetus (Arhiiviväärtuslik) |
| Toimik | 11-4.1/2025 |
| Juurdepääsupiirang | Avalik |
| Juurdepääsupiirang | |
| Adressaat | BALTIC ASSEMBLY |
| Saabumis/saatmisviis | BALTIC ASSEMBLY |
| Vastutaja | Kadri Tali (Rahandusministeerium, Kantsleri vastutusvaldkond, Eelarvepoliitika valdkond, Riigieelarve osakond) |
| Originaal | Ava uues aknas |
29 December 2025 No. 1/1225-361
Dear Ministers, On behalf of the Baltic Assembly, we would like to express our sincere appreciation to the Ministers of Finance for fostering cooperation of the Baltic States within your respective areas of responsibility, thereby strengthening sound budget governance, fiscal coordination, and the long-term economic resilience of our region. On 12 December 2025, the conference of the Baltic Assembly “Health as an Investment in Baltic Security and Future” was held in Riga. During the conference, Baltic parliamentarians, representatives of respective ministries and experts discussed health being a powerful long-term investment. The Baltic States currently treat healthcare predominantly as an expense rather than a strategic investment. We believe that shifting this paradigm can unlock economic growth, enhance productivity, and ensure long-term prosperity for the region. Unfortunately, the Baltic health systems lag behind the averages of the European Union (EU). Compared with the EU, the Baltic States collectively spend 7.4 % of GDP on health care, which is substantially lower than the EU average of 10.0 %. This represents health spending that is about 26% lower than the EU benchmark. As a result, compared with the EU average, the Baltic population experiences shorter and less healthy lives. Life expectancy in the Baltics is 76.9 years, while the EU average is 81.5 years. Baltic citizens also have approximately 5.9 fewer healthy years at birth than the EU average. Poor health outcomes in the Baltic States are linked to high economic costs from reduced productivity, early mortality, absenteeism, and presenteeism - annually, GDP losses across all diseases amount to 9.7 billion euros in the Baltic States, equal to 6.4 % of total Baltic GDP. These findings are of serious concern and underscore the importance of the active and close involvement of the Ministers of Finance in this process. While representatives of the Ministries of Finance of the Baltic States were not able to participate in the conference, we would nevertheless highly value your perspectives on several key issues raised during the discussions:
How do the Ministries of Finance currently assess health expenditure in the context of long-term economic growth?
What tools or methodologies do the Ministries of Finance use or plan to develop to evaluate the return on investment of health initiatives across sectors, including productivity and labour market participation?
Given the presented data on productivity losses, how can Ministries of Finance better collaborate with health authorities to quantify economic gains from improved population health?
Mr Arvils Ašeradens Minister for Finance
of the Republic of Latvia
Mr Jürgen Ligi Minister of Finance
of the Republic of Estonia
Mr Kristupas Vaitiekūnas Minister of Finance
of the Republic of Lithuania
How do you envision stronger cooperation between the Ministries of Health and the Ministries of Finance, and other economic ministries to align health expenditure with economic and social policy goals?
What steps can be taken to integrate health outcomes and return-on-investment metrics into multi-year fiscal planning and budget governance frameworks?
Do you foresee adjustments to national budget priorities to support preventive health measures that demonstrate high economic return-on-investment?
Would the Ministries of Finance support the development of a standardised regional framework for health return-on-investment measurement to enhance comparability and policy decision-making across the Baltic States?
We would greatly appreciate your replies by 2 March 2026 to ensure that the Health, Welfare and Family Committee of the Baltic Assembly can discuss the received answers at the meeting on 26-27 March 2026. Please find attached the presentation of the WifOR Institute.
Sincerely,
President of the Baltic Assembly
Vice President of the Baltic Assembly
Vice President of
the Baltic Assembly
Jānis Vucāns Republic of Latvia
Timo Suslov Republic of Estonia
Giedrius Drukteinis Republic of Lithuania
Chair of the Health, Welfare and Family
Committee of the Baltic Assembly
Vice Chair of the Health,
Welfare and Family Committee of
the Baltic Assembly
Vice Chair of the Health,
Welfare and Family Committee of
the Baltic Assembly
Antoņina Ņenaševa Republic of Latvia
Irja Lutsar Republic of Estonia
Saulius Čaplinskas Republic of Lithuania
Contact person: Agnija Antanovica, e-mail: [email protected]
Tähelepanu! Tegemist on välisvõrgust saabunud kirjaga. |
HOIATUS!
See e-kiri võib olla liba-, õngitsus- või pahaloomuline, kuna on saadetud asutusest, kus meiliserver on vigaselt seadistatud. |
Dear Madam/ Sir,
On behalf of the Baltic Assembly, I am pleased to forward the letter and the accompanying presentation to the Ministers of Finance of the Baltic States following the conference “Health as an Investment in Baltic Security and Future” that was held on 12 December 2025 in Riga. During the conference, Baltic parliamentarians, representatives of respective ministries and experts discussed health being a powerful long-term investment.
While representatives of the Ministries of Finance were not able to participate in the conference, we would nevertheless highly value their perspectives on several key issues raised during the discussions. We would greatly appreciate your replies by 2 March 2026.
Sincerely,
BALTIC ASSEMBLY |
Agnija Antanoviča Secretary General
|
29 December 2025 No. 1/1225-361
Dear Ministers, On behalf of the Baltic Assembly, we would like to express our sincere appreciation to the Ministers of Finance for fostering cooperation of the Baltic States within your respective areas of responsibility, thereby strengthening sound budget governance, fiscal coordination, and the long-term economic resilience of our region. On 12 December 2025, the conference of the Baltic Assembly “Health as an Investment in Baltic Security and Future” was held in Riga. During the conference, Baltic parliamentarians, representatives of respective ministries and experts discussed health being a powerful long-term investment. The Baltic States currently treat healthcare predominantly as an expense rather than a strategic investment. We believe that shifting this paradigm can unlock economic growth, enhance productivity, and ensure long-term prosperity for the region. Unfortunately, the Baltic health systems lag behind the averages of the European Union (EU). Compared with the EU, the Baltic States collectively spend 7.4 % of GDP on health care, which is substantially lower than the EU average of 10.0 %. This represents health spending that is about 26% lower than the EU benchmark. As a result, compared with the EU average, the Baltic population experiences shorter and less healthy lives. Life expectancy in the Baltics is 76.9 years, while the EU average is 81.5 years. Baltic citizens also have approximately 5.9 fewer healthy years at birth than the EU average. Poor health outcomes in the Baltic States are linked to high economic costs from reduced productivity, early mortality, absenteeism, and presenteeism - annually, GDP losses across all diseases amount to 9.7 billion euros in the Baltic States, equal to 6.4 % of total Baltic GDP. These findings are of serious concern and underscore the importance of the active and close involvement of the Ministers of Finance in this process. While representatives of the Ministries of Finance of the Baltic States were not able to participate in the conference, we would nevertheless highly value your perspectives on several key issues raised during the discussions:
How do the Ministries of Finance currently assess health expenditure in the context of long-term economic growth?
What tools or methodologies do the Ministries of Finance use or plan to develop to evaluate the return on investment of health initiatives across sectors, including productivity and labour market participation?
Given the presented data on productivity losses, how can Ministries of Finance better collaborate with health authorities to quantify economic gains from improved population health?
Mr Arvils Ašeradens Minister for Finance
of the Republic of Latvia
Mr Jürgen Ligi Minister of Finance
of the Republic of Estonia
Mr Kristupas Vaitiekūnas Minister of Finance
of the Republic of Lithuania
How do you envision stronger cooperation between the Ministries of Health and the Ministries of Finance, and other economic ministries to align health expenditure with economic and social policy goals?
What steps can be taken to integrate health outcomes and return-on-investment metrics into multi-year fiscal planning and budget governance frameworks?
Do you foresee adjustments to national budget priorities to support preventive health measures that demonstrate high economic return-on-investment?
Would the Ministries of Finance support the development of a standardised regional framework for health return-on-investment measurement to enhance comparability and policy decision-making across the Baltic States?
We would greatly appreciate your replies by 2 March 2026 to ensure that the Health, Welfare and Family Committee of the Baltic Assembly can discuss the received answers at the meeting on 26-27 March 2026. Please find attached the presentation of the WifOR Institute.
Sincerely,
President of the Baltic Assembly
Vice President of the Baltic Assembly
Vice President of
the Baltic Assembly
Jānis Vucāns Republic of Latvia
Timo Suslov Republic of Estonia
Giedrius Drukteinis Republic of Lithuania
Chair of the Health, Welfare and Family
Committee of the Baltic Assembly
Vice Chair of the Health,
Welfare and Family Committee of
the Baltic Assembly
Vice Chair of the Health,
Welfare and Family Committee of
the Baltic Assembly
Antoņina Ņenaševa Republic of Latvia
Irja Lutsar Republic of Estonia
Saulius Čaplinskas Republic of Lithuania
Contact person: Agnija Antanovica, e-mail: [email protected]
Dr. Malina Müller December 12, 2025
If you measure it, you can shape it!
The Societal Value of Health: Investing in Innovation for Baltic Prosperity
Baltic Assembly Conference: Health as an investment in Baltic security and future
About WifOR
Worldwide presence Facts & Figures
Locations: Berlin, Darmstadt, Leipzig, Athens
Economic research institute
Spin-off from the Department of Public Economics & Economic
Policy at the Technical University of Darmstadt, Germany
80 Employees
Over 650 successful projects for companies,
associations, and ministries
Research areas:
Projects in 55 countries – global, regional, and national analyses
HealthLabor Market Sustainability
Agenda
ROI and Societal Impact4
The Socioeconomic Burden – Method and selected Use Cases3
The Baltic Health & Economic Reality2
Paradigm Shift: Health as an Investment1
Recommendations5
1
Paradigm Shift: Health as an
Investment
5
WifOR is fostering a paradigm shift in health – from a cost factor to a
driver for growth, innovation, wealth, and prosperity with better health
Source: WifOR illustration, following Henke, Neumann, Schneider et al. (2010).
FUTUREPAST
Health Economy as a driver
for growth and employment
Growth sector,
increasing work force,
new career
opportunities
Investment in
health to promote
growth and productivity
Health Economy as a
diverse sector,
contribution to GDP
and employment
Better quality, more
outcome oriented
Healthcare as a
cost factor Separate silos and fragmentation |
Healthcare only | Input orientation |
Increasing health expenditures
€
If you measure it, you can shape it!
6
WifOR co-launched the G20 & G7 toolkit for strategic health investments
at the H20 Summit in Geneva Büroklammer
Source: WifOR 2025. Own illustration.
7
WifOR advocates the integration of global health metrics into policy
making at UN, WHO, G20, G7, EU Parliament, APEC, and others
Measure the social burden
(cost of illness)
Calculate the Social Impact
of medical interventions
Quantify economic impact
of investments
1 2 3
Source: WifOR illustration.
What is the return on investment (ROI) of health?
If you measure it, you can shape it!
2
The Baltic Health & Economic
Reality- Burden vs. EU
Benchmarks
9
Why shifting the paradigm from “cost” to “investment” is essential?
Source: Eurostat, 2023
Baltics Health Spending
• 7.4 % of GDP vs. EU 10.0 %
• 26 % lower than the EU average
(per capita ≈ €2,500 vs. EU €3,835)
Baltics Life Expectancy
• 76.9 years vs. EU 81.5 years
• 4.6 years shorter lives on average
If you measure it, you can shape it!
10
Annual GDP losses in the Baltics from health-related productivity losses
Source: derived estimates using Eurostat,2023. *Note: Totals may not sum due to rounding, €9.7 billion = total health-related productivity losses from all diseases and external causes combined (absenteeism, presenteeism and preventable deaths). The
preventable-deaths component (€5.9 bn) is calculated using the official Eurostat preventable-mortality categories mainly cardiovascular (55–60%), cancers (15–18%), mental/neurological (8–10%), and others (Eurostat preventable mortality distribution).**assuming
€200–300M per facility. ***average disposable household income ≈ €12,600 €.
.
Annual GDP losses
across all diseases
€9.7 billion per year*
= 6.4 % of total Baltic GDP
Absenteeism €1.52 billion
Presenteeism €2.28 billion
Preventable deaths €5.92 billion
Healthcare System Scale
• Enough to fund full universal healthcare for 3.6 million Baltic
citizens for one entire year.
Infrastructure Investment
• Enough to build and fully equip 30-45 state-of-the-art hospitals or
NCD centers across the three countries.**
Household Support
• Equals the total yearly income of more than 770,000 Baltic
families.***
4785
2738
2205
9728
6,40%
6,90%
5,70%
6,40%
0 2000 4000 6000 8000 10000 12000
Lithuania
Latvia
Estonia
Baltic Total
Annual GDP Losses from Health-Related Productivity Issues - Baltic States 2023
% GDP Total Loss (million €)
(all values in million €)
If you measure it, you can shape it!
11
Healthy life years (HLY) gap in the Baltics is 2-10 years below EU average
Source: Eurostat, 2023
Baltic citizens lose 6 healthy years
compared to the EU average
5.9 fewer healthy years at birth
(52.7- 60.9 vs. EU 63.1 years)
2.9 fewer healthy years at age 65
(4.8 - 7.6 vs. EU 9.5 years)
• €2 billion annual loss in productivity &
extra pension/long term care costs
(= 1.3 % of Baltic GDP)
Just 2 healthy years
of the gap
+ €1 billion economic
gain every year
If you measure it, you can shape it!
3
The Socioeconomic Burden –
Method and selected Use Cases
13
Individuals contribute to a nation’s wealth through both paid work and
unpaid work activities over their course of their lives
GDP: Gross Domestic Product.
Paid work
Unpaid work
activities
. . 20 . . . . . . . 30 . . . . . . . 40 . . . . . . . 50 . . . . . . 60 . . . 70 . . . . . . . 80 . . . . . 90 .
Retirement No gross value added in terms of
national accounts
Household production & voluntary work Additional (direct) value added ‘beyond’ GDP
Employment Direct, indirect and induced gross value added
Age
. . 20 . . . . . . . 30 . . . . . . . 40 . . . . . . . 50 . . . . . . 60 . . . . 70 . . . . . . . 80 . . . . . 90 . Age
C a p
a b
il it
y C
a p
a b
il it
y
⮚ By capturing unpaid work productivity in addition to paid work productivity, the Socioeconomic Burden of
Diseases includes the value lost beyond GDP from both employees and the non-working population.
If you measure it, you can shape it!
14
A disease not only affects patients’ paid and unpaid work productivity,
but impacts adjacent sectors and the broader economy
Sources: The effects of having a healthier population on the overall economy have been explored under the input-output (IO) model perspective (Leontief, 1986; Conway, 2022). Conway, R.S. (2022) Empirical Regional Economics.
Springer Texts in Business and Economics. Switzerland: Springer, p. 275. Available at: https://econpapers.repec.org/bookchap/sprsptbec/978-3-030-76646-7.htm (Accessed: 20 December 2022). Leontief, W. (1986) Input-Output
Economics. New York: Oxford University Press
GVA: Gross Value Added.
BROADER
ECONOMY
Unpaid Work
Direct Effects
Paid Work
Indirect Effects
Paid Work
Direct Effects
Paid Work
Induced Effects
The intermediate
consumption of
goods and services
from suppliers
triggered by the
direct GVA not
generated by paid
work due to
sickness.
PATIENT
The impact of
spending by
households not
receiving income
based on direct
and indirect
generated GVA.
Socioeconomic
Burden
The sum of Unpaid
Work Direct Effects
and Paid Work
Direct, Indirect and
Induced GVA
Effects.
Contributions from
unpaid work, such
as household
activities, vital to
the economy but
not reflected in the
GDP.
The immediate
economic impact
resulting from paid
work generated by
people becoming
sick.
If you measure it, you can shape it!
15
Quantifying the socioeconomic burden (SOB) of a disease
1 DALY
=
1 year fully disabled
=
1 year without
productivity/ work
capability
< 20 years
Paid
Work
Unpaid Work
Activities
Unpaid Work Activities
SOB
Burden of
disease in
terms of
monetized
paid and
unpaid work
losses
DALYs of persons under 20 years of age are not
monetized
DALY: Disability-Adjusted Life Year.
20-59 years
≥ 60 years
If you measure it, you can shape it!
16
Beyond the diagnosis: Socioeconomic burden of retinal disease
(AMD/DME) in Baltics (2025)
*Data based on DALYs and labor market participation, 2025 projections. **$3,000–$5,100 per patient per year (drug + visits + monitoring). *** assuming ~ 4$ - 7$M per center for construction + initial operating costs).
In 2025, the
Socioeconomic Burden of retinal
diseases is approximately
$97 million*
$40 million
$57 million
Paid work
Unpaid work
Treatment coverage for Retinal Patients
▪ Equivalent to treating 19,000 – 32,000 Baltic AMD and DME patients
for 1 year.**
Infrastructure Investment
▪ Enough to build 14-24 specialized retinal centers across the three
countries.***
Blindness Prevention
▪ Enough to prevent severe vision loss or legal blindness in 4,000 –
8,000 Baltic citizens over the next 10 years, through timely diagnosis
and effective retinal treatment.
If you measure it, you can shape it!
17
Beyond the diagnosis: Socioeconomic burden of HER2+ breast cancer
(BC) in Baltics (2025)
*Data based on DALYs and labor market participation, 2025 projections.** $40k–$60k per patient-year. ***assuming $150 per scan.
In 2025, the
Socioeconomic Burden of HER2+
BC is approximately
$288 million*
$121 million
$167 million
Paid work
Unpaid work
Treatment coverage for BC Patients
▪ Equivalent to providing full high efficacy HER2-targeted therapy for
4,800 -7,200 Baltic HER2+ BC.**
Early Detection
▪ Enough to fund 1.5 -1.9 million mammograms across the three
countries.***
Progression Prevention
▪ Enough to reduce the number of patients progressing to metastatic
HER2+ breast cancer by an estimated 800–1,600 cases over the next
10 years, through timely diagnosis and full access to high-efficacy
targeted therapy.
If you measure it, you can shape it!
18
The high socioeconomic burden of cardiovascular diseases (CVDs)
indicates that reducing the burden is essential
*Estimate based on results from Luengo-Fernandez et al. (2023) on the economic burden of CVD in the EU (2024), adapted using WifOR’s methodology. While Luengo-Fernandez et al. (2023) calculate direct costs (health, social, informal care) and productivity losses (valued with average
earnings), our approach builds on DALYs to capture the full potential productivity loss in terms of paid and unpaid work, valued via GVA, and includes indirect and induced economic effects. This adaptation results in an estimated GDP impact of 4–5%, compared to 2% in the original study.
**Estimations consider the forecasting of the country's economic development during the first 15 years after starting the P-CVD program. Source: WifOR Elaboration. HernandezVillafuerte,et al.. 2025.The Health ROI Assessor: Evaluating Novel CVD Prevention Approaches in Estonia. Value &
Outcomes Spotlight March/April 2025, pp 31-34
In Europe, CVDs is estimated to generate a social burden equivalent to
4-5 % of GDP*.
A €20 million prevention program in Estonia alone creates €127 million in societal
value over 15 years
= 7.75× return and 315 lives saved**.
In the Baltic States this equals €6 – 8 billion annually. If we prevented just
half of all CVD events → we would increase Baltic wealth by 2 – 2.5 % of
GDP
If you measure it, you can shape it!
4
ROI and Societal Impact
20
WifOR‘s Health ROI Assessor Framework
Additional details in Hernandez-Villafuerte, 2025
The Social Impact of
Health
If you measure it, you can shape it!
21
Macroeconomic value of a Cardiovascular Disease Prevention Program
in Estonia. Short term – Base case scenario
HE footprint
▪ An investment of €20 mio over five
years generates in terms of direct,
indirect, and induced effects
during the first 10 years:
▪ € 50 mio GVA value
▪ 1,178 additional workers.
Figure 5. Cumulative GVA Value Created via the HE Footprint
Source: WifOR Elaboration. Hernandez-Villafuerte et al.. 2025.The Health ROI Assessor:
Evaluating Novel CVD Prevention Approaches in Estonia. Value & Outcomes Spotlight
March/April 2025, pp 31-34
If you measure it, you can shape it!
22
Macroeconomic value of a Cardiovascular Disease Prevention Program
in Estonia. Short term – Base case scenario
The Social Impact of Health
▪ By avoiding 315 deaths and 928 non-fatal events, the program generates € 127.04 mio of value in
terms of increasing paid (€ 60.1 mio) and unpaid (€ 66.9 mio) work productivity during the first 15 years.
A. Unpaid Work B. Paid Work
Figure 6. Cumulative Gained Productivity – Short Term
Estimations consider the forecasting of the country's economic development during the first 15 years after starting the P-CVD program. Source: WifOR Elaboration. Hernandez-
Villafuerte,et al.. 2025.The Health ROI Assessor: Evaluating Novel CVD Prevention Approaches in Estonia. Value & Outcomes Spotlight March/April 2025, pp 31-34
If you measure it, you can shape it!
23
Health investments create a positive feedback loop
Source: own illustration. Sustainable Development Goals (UN).
Ensure healthy lives and
promote well-being for
all at all ages
SDG GOAL 3
Promote sustained,
inclusive and sustainable
economic growth, full and
productive employment
and decent work for all
SDG GOAL 8
More
Innovation
Better
Health Greater
Wealth
Build resilient infrastructure, promote sustainable
industrialization and foster innovation
SDG GOAL 9
If you measure it, you can shape it!
24
Investments in health pay off economically – in addition to health benefits,
they secure jobs and generate additional value added
Source: Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy (BMWE) (2022): Healthcare Industry – Facts & Figures. Results of the Healthcare Industry Accounts, data for 2022.
HEALTH & WELL-BEING
▪ Investments such as
vaccinations, screening, and
innovative treatments prevent
illness and death.
▪ They improve quality of life
and prolong life expectancy...
LABOR MARKET & SOCIETY
▪ ...but illness is holding back economic
potential.
▪ Investing in health secures existing
jobs and creates new ones.
▪ It prevents productivity losses and
recovers millions of working hours.
ECONOMY & PRODUCTIVITY
▪ Every euro invested generates
additional added value.
▪ Investments in health act as an
economic stimulus program with a
measurable return on investment
(ROI).
If you measure it, you can shape it!
5
Recommendations
26
How can we turn lost billions into saved lives?
Strengthen Baltic data exchange & EHDS
readiness
Increase prevention investments with
guaranteed ROI (retinal disease, CVD & BC)
Accelerate innovation access (WAIT
improvement target)
Introduce long-term ROI-based
budgeting
Implement a national
“Societal Value Mandate”
DATA 5
PREVENTION 4
SPEED 3
Horizon 2
VALUE 1
If you measure it, you can shape it!
www.wifor.com
WifOR
+49 30 2325 6665-0
+49 30 2325 6665-95
+49 1511 0580843
Institute
Joseph-Haydn-Strasse 1
10557 Berlin
Germany | Greece | Latin America | USA
Dr. Malina Müller
Head of Health Economics
28
Macroeconomic value of a Cardiovascular Disease Prevention Program
in Estonia. Long term – Scenario Analysis
▪ The Social Impact of Health
▪ Age 30 to 39 cohort lifetime
horizon
▪ By enrolling in the PCVD
program a cohort of 12,077
individuals between 30 and 39
years old
▪ 28.708 mio productive hours
are gained in paid and unpaid
activities
▪ Translated into €1,059.65 mio of
value creation.
Figure 7. Cumulative Gained Productivity in Paid and Unpaid
Work Activities: 30_39 Cohort (2015 prices).
Estimations assumes that the economic variables are constant after the first 15 years.
Source: WifOR Elaboration. Hernandez-Villafuerte et al.. 2025.The Health ROI Assessor: Evaluating
Novel CVD Prevention Approaches in Estonia. Value & Outcomes Spotlight March/April 2025, pp 31-34
If you measure it, you can shape it!
Dr. Malina Müller December 12, 2025
If you measure it, you can shape it!
The Societal Value of Health: Investing in Innovation for Baltic Prosperity
Baltic Assembly Conference: Health as an investment in Baltic security and future
About WifOR
Worldwide presence Facts & Figures
Locations: Berlin, Darmstadt, Leipzig, Athens
Economic research institute
Spin-off from the Department of Public Economics & Economic
Policy at the Technical University of Darmstadt, Germany
80 Employees
Over 650 successful projects for companies,
associations, and ministries
Research areas:
Projects in 55 countries – global, regional, and national analyses
HealthLabor Market Sustainability
Agenda
ROI and Societal Impact4
The Socioeconomic Burden – Method and selected Use Cases3
The Baltic Health & Economic Reality2
Paradigm Shift: Health as an Investment1
Recommendations5
1
Paradigm Shift: Health as an
Investment
5
WifOR is fostering a paradigm shift in health – from a cost factor to a
driver for growth, innovation, wealth, and prosperity with better health
Source: WifOR illustration, following Henke, Neumann, Schneider et al. (2010).
FUTUREPAST
Health Economy as a driver
for growth and employment
Growth sector,
increasing work force,
new career
opportunities
Investment in
health to promote
growth and productivity
Health Economy as a
diverse sector,
contribution to GDP
and employment
Better quality, more
outcome oriented
Healthcare as a
cost factor Separate silos and fragmentation |
Healthcare only | Input orientation |
Increasing health expenditures
€
If you measure it, you can shape it!
6
WifOR co-launched the G20 & G7 toolkit for strategic health investments
at the H20 Summit in Geneva Büroklammer
Source: WifOR 2025. Own illustration.
7
WifOR advocates the integration of global health metrics into policy
making at UN, WHO, G20, G7, EU Parliament, APEC, and others
Measure the social burden
(cost of illness)
Calculate the Social Impact
of medical interventions
Quantify economic impact
of investments
1 2 3
Source: WifOR illustration.
What is the return on investment (ROI) of health?
If you measure it, you can shape it!
2
The Baltic Health & Economic
Reality- Burden vs. EU
Benchmarks
9
Why shifting the paradigm from “cost” to “investment” is essential?
Source: Eurostat, 2023
Baltics Health Spending
• 7.4 % of GDP vs. EU 10.0 %
• 26 % lower than the EU average
(per capita ≈ €2,500 vs. EU €3,835)
Baltics Life Expectancy
• 76.9 years vs. EU 81.5 years
• 4.6 years shorter lives on average
If you measure it, you can shape it!
10
Annual GDP losses in the Baltics from health-related productivity losses
Source: derived estimates using Eurostat,2023. *Note: Totals may not sum due to rounding, €9.7 billion = total health-related productivity losses from all diseases and external causes combined (absenteeism, presenteeism and preventable deaths). The
preventable-deaths component (€5.9 bn) is calculated using the official Eurostat preventable-mortality categories mainly cardiovascular (55–60%), cancers (15–18%), mental/neurological (8–10%), and others (Eurostat preventable mortality distribution).**assuming
€200–300M per facility. ***average disposable household income ≈ €12,600 €.
.
Annual GDP losses
across all diseases
€9.7 billion per year*
= 6.4 % of total Baltic GDP
Absenteeism €1.52 billion
Presenteeism €2.28 billion
Preventable deaths €5.92 billion
Healthcare System Scale
• Enough to fund full universal healthcare for 3.6 million Baltic
citizens for one entire year.
Infrastructure Investment
• Enough to build and fully equip 30-45 state-of-the-art hospitals or
NCD centers across the three countries.**
Household Support
• Equals the total yearly income of more than 770,000 Baltic
families.***
4785
2738
2205
9728
6,40%
6,90%
5,70%
6,40%
0 2000 4000 6000 8000 10000 12000
Lithuania
Latvia
Estonia
Baltic Total
Annual GDP Losses from Health-Related Productivity Issues - Baltic States 2023
% GDP Total Loss (million €)
(all values in million €)
If you measure it, you can shape it!
11
Healthy life years (HLY) gap in the Baltics is 2-10 years below EU average
Source: Eurostat, 2023
Baltic citizens lose 6 healthy years
compared to the EU average
5.9 fewer healthy years at birth
(52.7- 60.9 vs. EU 63.1 years)
2.9 fewer healthy years at age 65
(4.8 - 7.6 vs. EU 9.5 years)
• €2 billion annual loss in productivity &
extra pension/long term care costs
(= 1.3 % of Baltic GDP)
Just 2 healthy years
of the gap
+ €1 billion economic
gain every year
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3
The Socioeconomic Burden –
Method and selected Use Cases
13
Individuals contribute to a nation’s wealth through both paid work and
unpaid work activities over their course of their lives
GDP: Gross Domestic Product.
Paid work
Unpaid work
activities
. . 20 . . . . . . . 30 . . . . . . . 40 . . . . . . . 50 . . . . . . 60 . . . 70 . . . . . . . 80 . . . . . 90 .
Retirement No gross value added in terms of
national accounts
Household production & voluntary work Additional (direct) value added ‘beyond’ GDP
Employment Direct, indirect and induced gross value added
Age
. . 20 . . . . . . . 30 . . . . . . . 40 . . . . . . . 50 . . . . . . 60 . . . . 70 . . . . . . . 80 . . . . . 90 . Age
C a p
a b
il it
y C
a p
a b
il it
y
⮚ By capturing unpaid work productivity in addition to paid work productivity, the Socioeconomic Burden of
Diseases includes the value lost beyond GDP from both employees and the non-working population.
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14
A disease not only affects patients’ paid and unpaid work productivity,
but impacts adjacent sectors and the broader economy
Sources: The effects of having a healthier population on the overall economy have been explored under the input-output (IO) model perspective (Leontief, 1986; Conway, 2022). Conway, R.S. (2022) Empirical Regional Economics.
Springer Texts in Business and Economics. Switzerland: Springer, p. 275. Available at: https://econpapers.repec.org/bookchap/sprsptbec/978-3-030-76646-7.htm (Accessed: 20 December 2022). Leontief, W. (1986) Input-Output
Economics. New York: Oxford University Press
GVA: Gross Value Added.
BROADER
ECONOMY
Unpaid Work
Direct Effects
Paid Work
Indirect Effects
Paid Work
Direct Effects
Paid Work
Induced Effects
The intermediate
consumption of
goods and services
from suppliers
triggered by the
direct GVA not
generated by paid
work due to
sickness.
PATIENT
The impact of
spending by
households not
receiving income
based on direct
and indirect
generated GVA.
Socioeconomic
Burden
The sum of Unpaid
Work Direct Effects
and Paid Work
Direct, Indirect and
Induced GVA
Effects.
Contributions from
unpaid work, such
as household
activities, vital to
the economy but
not reflected in the
GDP.
The immediate
economic impact
resulting from paid
work generated by
people becoming
sick.
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15
Quantifying the socioeconomic burden (SOB) of a disease
1 DALY
=
1 year fully disabled
=
1 year without
productivity/ work
capability
< 20 years
Paid
Work
Unpaid Work
Activities
Unpaid Work Activities
SOB
Burden of
disease in
terms of
monetized
paid and
unpaid work
losses
DALYs of persons under 20 years of age are not
monetized
DALY: Disability-Adjusted Life Year.
20-59 years
≥ 60 years
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16
Beyond the diagnosis: Socioeconomic burden of retinal disease
(AMD/DME) in Baltics (2025)
*Data based on DALYs and labor market participation, 2025 projections. **$3,000–$5,100 per patient per year (drug + visits + monitoring). *** assuming ~ 4$ - 7$M per center for construction + initial operating costs).
In 2025, the
Socioeconomic Burden of retinal
diseases is approximately
$97 million*
$40 million
$57 million
Paid work
Unpaid work
Treatment coverage for Retinal Patients
▪ Equivalent to treating 19,000 – 32,000 Baltic AMD and DME patients
for 1 year.**
Infrastructure Investment
▪ Enough to build 14-24 specialized retinal centers across the three
countries.***
Blindness Prevention
▪ Enough to prevent severe vision loss or legal blindness in 4,000 –
8,000 Baltic citizens over the next 10 years, through timely diagnosis
and effective retinal treatment.
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17
Beyond the diagnosis: Socioeconomic burden of HER2+ breast cancer
(BC) in Baltics (2025)
*Data based on DALYs and labor market participation, 2025 projections.** $40k–$60k per patient-year. ***assuming $150 per scan.
In 2025, the
Socioeconomic Burden of HER2+
BC is approximately
$288 million*
$121 million
$167 million
Paid work
Unpaid work
Treatment coverage for BC Patients
▪ Equivalent to providing full high efficacy HER2-targeted therapy for
4,800 -7,200 Baltic HER2+ BC.**
Early Detection
▪ Enough to fund 1.5 -1.9 million mammograms across the three
countries.***
Progression Prevention
▪ Enough to reduce the number of patients progressing to metastatic
HER2+ breast cancer by an estimated 800–1,600 cases over the next
10 years, through timely diagnosis and full access to high-efficacy
targeted therapy.
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18
The high socioeconomic burden of cardiovascular diseases (CVDs)
indicates that reducing the burden is essential
*Estimate based on results from Luengo-Fernandez et al. (2023) on the economic burden of CVD in the EU (2024), adapted using WifOR’s methodology. While Luengo-Fernandez et al. (2023) calculate direct costs (health, social, informal care) and productivity losses (valued with average
earnings), our approach builds on DALYs to capture the full potential productivity loss in terms of paid and unpaid work, valued via GVA, and includes indirect and induced economic effects. This adaptation results in an estimated GDP impact of 4–5%, compared to 2% in the original study.
**Estimations consider the forecasting of the country's economic development during the first 15 years after starting the P-CVD program. Source: WifOR Elaboration. HernandezVillafuerte,et al.. 2025.The Health ROI Assessor: Evaluating Novel CVD Prevention Approaches in Estonia. Value &
Outcomes Spotlight March/April 2025, pp 31-34
In Europe, CVDs is estimated to generate a social burden equivalent to
4-5 % of GDP*.
A €20 million prevention program in Estonia alone creates €127 million in societal
value over 15 years
= 7.75× return and 315 lives saved**.
In the Baltic States this equals €6 – 8 billion annually. If we prevented just
half of all CVD events → we would increase Baltic wealth by 2 – 2.5 % of
GDP
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4
ROI and Societal Impact
20
WifOR‘s Health ROI Assessor Framework
Additional details in Hernandez-Villafuerte, 2025
The Social Impact of
Health
If you measure it, you can shape it!
21
Macroeconomic value of a Cardiovascular Disease Prevention Program
in Estonia. Short term – Base case scenario
HE footprint
▪ An investment of €20 mio over five
years generates in terms of direct,
indirect, and induced effects
during the first 10 years:
▪ € 50 mio GVA value
▪ 1,178 additional workers.
Figure 5. Cumulative GVA Value Created via the HE Footprint
Source: WifOR Elaboration. Hernandez-Villafuerte et al.. 2025.The Health ROI Assessor:
Evaluating Novel CVD Prevention Approaches in Estonia. Value & Outcomes Spotlight
March/April 2025, pp 31-34
If you measure it, you can shape it!
22
Macroeconomic value of a Cardiovascular Disease Prevention Program
in Estonia. Short term – Base case scenario
The Social Impact of Health
▪ By avoiding 315 deaths and 928 non-fatal events, the program generates € 127.04 mio of value in
terms of increasing paid (€ 60.1 mio) and unpaid (€ 66.9 mio) work productivity during the first 15 years.
A. Unpaid Work B. Paid Work
Figure 6. Cumulative Gained Productivity – Short Term
Estimations consider the forecasting of the country's economic development during the first 15 years after starting the P-CVD program. Source: WifOR Elaboration. Hernandez-
Villafuerte,et al.. 2025.The Health ROI Assessor: Evaluating Novel CVD Prevention Approaches in Estonia. Value & Outcomes Spotlight March/April 2025, pp 31-34
If you measure it, you can shape it!
23
Health investments create a positive feedback loop
Source: own illustration. Sustainable Development Goals (UN).
Ensure healthy lives and
promote well-being for
all at all ages
SDG GOAL 3
Promote sustained,
inclusive and sustainable
economic growth, full and
productive employment
and decent work for all
SDG GOAL 8
More
Innovation
Better
Health Greater
Wealth
Build resilient infrastructure, promote sustainable
industrialization and foster innovation
SDG GOAL 9
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24
Investments in health pay off economically – in addition to health benefits,
they secure jobs and generate additional value added
Source: Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy (BMWE) (2022): Healthcare Industry – Facts & Figures. Results of the Healthcare Industry Accounts, data for 2022.
HEALTH & WELL-BEING
▪ Investments such as
vaccinations, screening, and
innovative treatments prevent
illness and death.
▪ They improve quality of life
and prolong life expectancy...
LABOR MARKET & SOCIETY
▪ ...but illness is holding back economic
potential.
▪ Investing in health secures existing
jobs and creates new ones.
▪ It prevents productivity losses and
recovers millions of working hours.
ECONOMY & PRODUCTIVITY
▪ Every euro invested generates
additional added value.
▪ Investments in health act as an
economic stimulus program with a
measurable return on investment
(ROI).
If you measure it, you can shape it!
5
Recommendations
26
How can we turn lost billions into saved lives?
Strengthen Baltic data exchange & EHDS
readiness
Increase prevention investments with
guaranteed ROI (retinal disease, CVD & BC)
Accelerate innovation access (WAIT
improvement target)
Introduce long-term ROI-based
budgeting
Implement a national
“Societal Value Mandate”
DATA 5
PREVENTION 4
SPEED 3
Horizon 2
VALUE 1
If you measure it, you can shape it!
www.wifor.com
WifOR
+49 30 2325 6665-0
+49 30 2325 6665-95
+49 1511 0580843
Institute
Joseph-Haydn-Strasse 1
10557 Berlin
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Dr. Malina Müller
Head of Health Economics
28
Macroeconomic value of a Cardiovascular Disease Prevention Program
in Estonia. Long term – Scenario Analysis
▪ The Social Impact of Health
▪ Age 30 to 39 cohort lifetime
horizon
▪ By enrolling in the PCVD
program a cohort of 12,077
individuals between 30 and 39
years old
▪ 28.708 mio productive hours
are gained in paid and unpaid
activities
▪ Translated into €1,059.65 mio of
value creation.
Figure 7. Cumulative Gained Productivity in Paid and Unpaid
Work Activities: 30_39 Cohort (2015 prices).
Estimations assumes that the economic variables are constant after the first 15 years.
Source: WifOR Elaboration. Hernandez-Villafuerte et al.. 2025.The Health ROI Assessor: Evaluating
Novel CVD Prevention Approaches in Estonia. Value & Outcomes Spotlight March/April 2025, pp 31-34
If you measure it, you can shape it!