WEF 2026 Experts: Solve Healthcare's Cost Crisis by Framing It as Investment

Experts at the World Economic Forum 2026 highlighted the global paradox of rising healthcare costs coupled with declining quality. They advocated for a fundamental reframing of healthcare as a strategic investment in democracy, economic productivity, and population health. Solutions proposed include leveraging technology for personalized care at scale and implementing stronger public policies to address market failures. The consensus emphasized that long-term vision and preventive investments are crucial for sustainable health systems.

Key Points: WEF 2026: Experts Urge Healthcare Investment Over Cost View

  • Reframe healthcare from cost to investment
  • Use technology for efficiency and personalization
  • Strengthen public policy and trust
  • Adopt long-term holistic strategies
2 min read

WEF 2026: Expert call for finding solutions to health cost-investment paradox

At WEF 2026, global leaders argue healthcare is a democratic and economic investment, not just a cost, calling for tech and policy solutions.

"investment into healthcare is an investment into democracy - Nina Warken"

Davos, Jan 20

Amid rising costs and declining quality in healthcare systems worldwide, experts at the ongoing World Economic Forum 2026 deliberated on the need to find solutions to break the cost-investment paradox.

During the session, 'Healthcare: Cost or Investment', experts discussed how healthcare systems worldwide face an inescapable paradox: spending rises while quality often declines.

Nina Warken, Germany's Federal Minister of Health, stated that countries must have better healthcare facilities and must also finance them to enable citizens to live a healthy and disease-free life.

Stressing the need to gain citizens' trust in public healthcare, she said that "investment into healthcare is an investment into democracy".

Stefanie Stantcheva, Professor of Political Economy at Harvard University, US, said that costs and investments into healthcare are unique.

"Public policies can play a big role in this because the private market struggles to support healthcare systems due to a range of externalities, which can also affect others," Stantcheva said.

The experts also argued that framing healthcare solely as cost can obscure a critical reframe. Investment must be made in prevention, efficiency, and innovation, which can lead to healthier workforces, reduced emergency burdens, and increased economic productivity.

Suneeta Reddy, Managing Director, Apollo Hospitals Enterprise, stated that healthcare is an investment, and the returns can be measured in terms of health outcomes.

"India now has a vibrant healthcare system, but investments are imperative for the growth of the sector. Health investments can bring returns, as with higher volume, we are able to deliver clinical outcomes at scale. All this makes investment into healthcare a value proposition".

Bernd Montag, Chief Executive Officer, Siemens Healthineers, suggested that rising costs can be tackled with technology.

Montag called for "personalisation at scale". But "this only works if we really smartly deploy technology from prevention to the right diagnosis to the therapy without multiplying the human factor in this process," he said.

Further, Michel Demaré, Chair of the Board, AstraZeneca, argued for a long-term vision, conceding this was difficult when dealing with governments that are in power for four-year terms. He stressed, however, that taking a holistic and long-term approach would prove the only way.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Rohit P
All good points, but the real talk is missing. In my city, the government hospital is overcrowded and understaffed, while private hospitals are unaffordable. Where is the "investment" for the common man? We need Ayushman Bharat to work much better on the ground. More transparency in how funds are used is key.
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Ananya R
Technology is the way forward! Telemedicine and AI diagnostics can be a game-changer for India, especially in rural areas. But as the Siemens CEO said, it has to be deployed smartly. We can't just buy expensive machines; we need trained people and a system to maintain them. A holistic approach is crucial.
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Vikram M
The German minister hit the nail on the head - "investment into healthcare is an investment into democracy." When people are healthy, they can participate in the economy and society. In India, we need to move beyond short-term schemes. Political will for long-term planning, like Demaré said, is the biggest hurdle.
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Priya S
Prevention is everything! We spend so much on treating illnesses. A stronger focus on public health, clean water, nutrition education, and vaccination would save crores in the long run. This is the true "investment" they should be talking about. A healthy child today is a productive citizen tomorrow.
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David E
Interesting to see this global perspective. The paradox is universal. The point about the private market struggling due to externalities is critical. In India's mixed model, defining the role of the state versus the private sector clearly is the first step to solving this. Clarity will attract the right kind of

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