π Abstract
U.S. healthcare expenditures amount to nearly 20% of GDP and yet, compared to its peer countries, the nationβs health outcomes and health system performance are lackluster. This is the result of decades of policy interventions targeted towards the clinical quality of care, insurance coverage, and prescription drug prices, but not much to health system administration as a principal determinant of health system performance and economic strength. In this paper, we make the case that the effective administration of the health system is an economic issue and a source of national competitive advantage not an operational cost or a nonclinical nuisance. The paper reviews the body of evidence on the health economics, workforce, and systems leadership literatures to detail the burdens that administrative inefficiency and fragmentation impose on the system through its contribution to higher spending, clinician burnout, lower productivity, and ultimately population health. The paper leverages Vortiaβs framework for administrative leadership to help identify administrative inefficiency as a governance issue across processes, incentive, and human-technology capital architecture. The paper then shares evidence and insight on how effective health system administration through workflow simplification, prevention-based care coordination, culturally responsive leadership, and well-governed technology adoption, can produce economic value by reducing waste, stabilizing the healthcare workforce, boosting labor force participation, and strengthening societal resilience. Overall, we find that health system administration is an economic stabilizer and matters not only for the performance of healthcare delivery organizations but also the health of labor markets and the economy. Therefore, administrative reform should be a central economic policy and business strategy to drive healthcare value, healthcare workforce sustainability, and economic resilience for the nation.
π How to Cite
Mr. William Vortia, Miss Stacey Yayra Makumator, Daniel Duah,"Efficient Health System Administration as a Strategic Economic Asset in the United States" International Journal of Advanced Multidisciplinary Research and Educational Development, V2(1): Page(661-667) Jan-Feb 2026. ISSN: 3107-6513. www.ijamred.com. Published by Scientific and Academic Research Publishing.