中亚地区卫生支出收入弹性的确定

Imoh Ekpenyong
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摘要

摘要:本研究在现有文献的基础上,将撒哈拉以南非洲国家划分为两大卫生系统(公共和私人)。如果一个国家在研究期间公共卫生支出的平均份额大于私人卫生支出的平均份额,则该国家的卫生系统被归类为公共卫生占主导地位;如果情况相反,则将其归类为主要是私有的。其目的是得出该分区域其他国家卫生支出的收入弹性,在这些国家,提供卫生服务可能是一项必要的福利。为了捕捉这种关系的动态本质,该研究的方法依赖于几个计量经济学程序(混合平均组、平均组和常见相关误差平均组估计器)。模型中包括的其他变量包括官方发展援助、物价水平、65岁以上人口和移民汇款。单位根检验表明,研究中的大多数变量在水平上不是平稳的;然而,从长远来看,它们是协整的,证明了评估技术的选择是正确的。实证结果表明,撒哈拉以南非洲地区医疗卫生支出的短期收入弹性为0.36,长期收入弹性为1.18,调整速度为0.41。这表明41%的短期不均衡在当前时期消散。模型中作为对照的其他变量没有统计学意义。在仅将收入作为回归量的简化模型中,总体样本的短期和长期收入弹性仍然显著,然而,以公共卫生系统为主的收入弹性大于以私营卫生系统为主的收入弹性。这表明,在撒哈拉以南非洲以私营为主的卫生系统中,卫生更多地是一个发展问题。本研究的一个含义是,撒哈拉以南非洲国家的公民在卫生支出上更多地依赖私人融资,可能面临灾难性的卫生融资。因此,政策制定者可以通过鼓励为医疗保健提供更多公共融资来避免这种情况。
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Determining the Income Elasticity of Health Expenditure in Sub Sharan
ABSTRACT: The present study adds to the existing literature by grouping countries in sub-Saharan Africa into two broad health systems (public and private). A country's health system is classified as predominantly public if the average share of public health expenditure for the period under study is greater than the average share of private health expenditure; it is classified as predominantly private if the reverse is the case. The aim is to derive the income elasticities of health expenditure in other to unravel countries in the sub region where health provision is likely to be a necessary good. To capture the dynamic nature of the relationship, the study's methodology relies on several econometric procedures (pooled mean group, mean group, and common correlated error mean group estimators). Other variables included in the model are official development assistance, the price level, population above 65 and migrant remittances. The unit root test performed showed that most of the variables in the study are not stationary at level; however, they are cointegrated in the long run, justifying the choice of the estimation techniques. The empirical results reveals that the short run income elasticity of health expenditure in sub-Saharan Africa is 0.36 and in the long run, the value becomes 1.18 with a speed of adjustment of 0.41. This suggest that 41% of the short run disequilibrium is dissipated in the current period. Other variables that were included in the model as controls were not statistically significant. In the reduced model that has only income as regressor, the short run and long run income elasticities in the overall sample continues to remain significant, however, the income elasticity in the predominantly public health system is greater than the elasticity in the predominantly private health system. This suggests that health is more of a development issue in a predominantly private health system in sub–Saharan Africa. An implication of the present study is that citizens of sub-Saharan African countries that rely more on private financing of health expenditure are likely to be exposed to catastrophic health financing. Hence, policymakers can avert this by encouraging more public financing of healthcare provision.
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