Health Investments and Economic Growth : Macroeconomic Evidence and Microeconomic Foundations
Keywords
ALCOHOL CONSUMPTIONWORKERS
PRENATAL CARE
LABOR FORCE
IMPACT ON HEALTH
MORTALITY LEVELS
ELDERLY
ONCHOCERCIASIS CONTROL
PUBLIC POLICY
COHORT STUDIES
UNDER-FIVE MORTALITY
FOOD SUPPLEMENTS
INCOME GROWTH
LEVELS OF EDUCATION
IRON
GROWTH RATE OF POPULATION
CITIZENS
MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIES
HOUSEHOLD WORK
SKILL DEVELOPMENT
UNEMPLOYMENT
PUBLIC HEALTH INTERVENTIONS
SURVIVAL RATE
CIVIL WAR
FOOD PRODUCTION
HEALTH INDICATORS
DECLINES IN MORTALITY
HEALTH CARE SPENDING
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
MEDICAL SUPPLIES
HEALTH CARE COSTS
MENTAL ILLNESS
CANCER
PATIENTS
EQUILIBRIUM
COMMUNICABLE DISEASES
PUBLIC HEALTH CARE SERVICES
RISK FACTORS
MORTALITY REDUCTIONS
INCOME GROUPS
INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS
HIGH DEATH RATES
WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION
MEDICAL TREATMENT
CLINICS
EPIDEMIC
INCOME EFFECTS
QUARANTINE
MARKET FAILURES
CYCLE OF POVERTY
LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES
BLINDNESS
INSURANCE
PHYSICIANS
ACCESS TO HEALTH CARE
PROVIDER PAYMENT
SCHOOL-AGE CHILDREN
CITIES
SOCIAL NETWORKS
HEALTH POLICY
FEMALE EDUCATION
NUMBER OF CHILDREN
QUALITY OF HEALTH
INFANT MORTALITY RATE
SIBLINGS
POLICY RESEARCH
ADULT MORTALITY
SCARCE RESOURCES
HOUSEHOLD INCOME
SANITATION
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
HUMAN ACTIVITY
MORTALITY DECLINES
INFANTS
HIV/AIDS
YOUNG CHILDREN
HEALTH SERVICE
PUBLIC HEALTH
ADULT MORTALITY RATE
HEALTH INTERVENTIONS
INTERVENTION
ORPHANS
SMOKING
EFFECTIVE POLICIES
ECONOMIC PRODUCTIVITY
CAPITAL INVESTMENTS
MEDICAL PROCEDURES
ECONOMIC GROWTH
INFECTIOUS DISEASES
DEMOGRAPHIC CHANGES
JOB TRAINING
DRUGS
CHILD MORTALITY
LIFE EXPECTANCY AT BIRTH
EXPENDITURES
DISADVANTAGED CHILDREN
NUTRITION
INVESTMENTS IN EDUCATION
NATURE OF HEALTH
GREEN REVOLUTION
LABOR SUPPLY
NUTRITIONAL STATUS
HEALTH OUTCOMES
QUALITY OF LIFE
SCHOOL ATTENDANCE
SURGERY
URBANIZATION
DEWORMING
EPIDEMIOLOGY
POPULATION CHANGES
DISSEMINATION
VACCINES
MEDICAL SERVICES
INFECTION RATES
MARGINAL COSTS
NONGOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATIONS
INCOME DISTRIBUTION
ONCHOCERCIASIS CONTROL PROGRAM
PUBLIC POLICIES
HOSPITAL AUTONOMY
PRIMARY SCHOOL
INFANT
PREMATURE DEATH
INDIVIDUAL HEALTH
ILL HEALTH
PUBLIC HEALTH CARE
PRIMARY HEALTH SERVICES
MEDICAL FACILITIES
MEDICAL PERSONNEL
PUBLIC SPENDING
HEALTH SECTOR
ECONOMIC OUTCOMES
ECONOMIC IMPLICATIONS
MARGINAL COST
ADVERSE SELECTION
AGGREGATE INCOME
HEALTH INVESTMENTS
EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT
PHYSICIAN
POLICY RESEARCH WORKING PAPER
MORTALITY
HEALTH PROBLEMS
HEALTH PROFESSIONS
LABOR MARKET
BASIC SANITATION
GOOD GOVERNANCE
MALARIA
PARENTING
IMPORTANCE OF EDUCATION
EXTENDED FAMILIES
COST-EFFECTIVENESS
IMMUNIZATIONS
SAFETY NET
HEALTH CONDITIONS
PUBLIC PROVIDERS
IODINE DEFICIENCY
PUBLIC HEALTH SPENDING
HEALTH CARE DELIVERY
INVESTMENT IN CHILDREN
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION
MALNOURISHED CHILDREN
SERVICE DELIVERY
PSYCHOLOGY
NATIONAL HEALTH SERVICE
MOTHER
PROBABILITY
HEALTH CONSEQUENCES
LOWER FERTILITY
HEALTH WORKERS
LAND PRODUCTIVITY
LITERACY RATES
POPULATION SIZE
MEDICAL CARE
MEDICAL TREATMENTS
HEALTH SERVICES
HOSPITAL
HEALTH CARE
PUBLIC HOSPITALS
MENTAL HEALTH
PUBLIC EXPENDITURE
SOCIAL RETURNS
RICHER COUNTRIES
MORBIDITY
POLICY GUIDANCE
MEDICAID
DOCTORS
HEALTH CARE SERVICES
CLEAN WATER
HUMAN CAPITAL
POOR HEALTH
POLICY MAKERS
DECISION MAKING
LIFE EXPECTANCY
HEALTH CARE SYSTEMS
PATIENT
DELIVERY OF HEALTH CARE
HOSPITALS
HIV
ADULT LITERACY
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
HYGIENE
PREGNANT WOMEN
ILLNESSES
INFANT MORTALITY
RESEARCH CENTERS
HEALTH INSTITUTIONS
RICHER PEOPLE
POLICY IMPLICATIONS
NATIONAL HEALTH
INCOME
CHILD MORTALITY RATES
ORAL REHYDRATION THERAPY
DRINKING WATER
HEALTH ORGANIZATION
DETERMINANTS OF HEALTH
DEATHS
HEALTH POLICIES
EPIDEMICS
EARLY CHILDHOOD
PRACTITIONERS
HEALTH STATUS
PROGRESS
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http://hdl.handle.net/10986/4072Abstract
This paper reviews the correlations and potential links between health and economic growth and summarizes the evidence on the role of government in improving health status. At the macroeconomic level, the evidence of an impact of health on growth remains ambiguous due both to difficulties in measuring health, and to the methodological challenges of identifying causal links. The evidence on the micro linkages from health investments to productivity and income are robust. Progress in life expectancy over the past two centuries has been spectacular, fueled by: improved agriculture that has increased food quantity; knowledge of disease transmission, and effective public health interventions that have controlled communicable diseases such as malaria, yellow fever, and hookworm; and, most recently and importantly, investments in very young children that pay off in healthier and more productive adults. Whether public investments in medical care affect health hinges on the quality of health institutions. In much of the developing world, factors such as chronic absenteeism among public providers, poor budget execution, ineffective management, and virtually no accountability weaken public efforts. Institutional issues are central in efforts to enhance public health investments, which in turn have a direct impact on the population's welfare and, perhaps over the long term, improvements in national income.Date
2012-03-19Identifier
oai:openknowledge.worldbank.org:10986/4072http://hdl.handle.net/10986/4072
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