Abstract

ABSTRACT In this study, the causal relationship between health expenditure and economic growth is examined using panel data from sub-Saharan African countries for the period 2008–2017. The study decomposes health expenditure into two components: public health expenditure and private health expenditure. In order to establish whether the causal relationship between health expenditure and economic growth depends on a country's level of income, the study divides the studied countries into two groups: low-income countries and middle-income countries. In order to address the omission-of-variable bias, which is associated with some of the previous studies, the study incorporates life expectancy as an intermittent variable between health expenditure and economic growth – thereby creating a system of multivariate equations. Using a panel ECM-based Granger-causality model, the study found that when public expenditure is used as a proxy, a distinct unidirectional causality from health expenditure to economic growth is found to prevail in low-income countries, but no causality is found to exist in middle-income countries. However, when private health expenditure is used, a short-run causality from economic growth to health expenditure is found to prevail in middle-income countries, but no causality is found to exist in low-income countries. Policy implications are discussed.

Highlights

  • The relationship between health expenditure and economic growth has attracted a great deal of literature in recent years

  • When private health expenditure is used as a proxy for health expenditure, the results show that no causality between health expenditure and economic growth exists in low-income countries, but in the middle-income countries a unidirectional causal flow from economic growth to health expenditure is found to prevail in the short run

  • This study examines the causal relationship between health expenditure and economic growth in sub-Saharan African countries using panel data from 2008 to 2017

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Summary

UNISA ECONOMIC RESEARCH WORKING PAPER SERIES

HEALTH EXPENDITURE AND ECONOMIC GROWTH IN SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA: AN EMPIRICAL INVESTIGATION. Odhiambo Department of Economics University of South Africa P. UNISA Economic Research Working Papers constitute work in progress. They are papers under submission or forthcoming elsewhere. The views expressed in this paper, as well as any errors or omissions are, entirely those of the author(s). Comments or questions about this paper should be sent directly to the corresponding author

Introduction
First Difference
Pedroni Residual Cointegration Test
Dependent Variable
Conclusion
Full Text
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