Abstract

The primary query of this paper centres on the role played by income in determining the extent of fund allocated by Indian states for improvement of health of its population. Drawing data from the fourteen major states of India over a time span of twenty-three financial years (1974–75 to 1996–97) and using recent advances in panel data time series econometrics, this paper documents the presence of a long run relationship between income and health expenditure. The long-run elasticity estimates reiterate that publicly provided health services should be considered as “necessities”. Results the panel error correction model demonstrate that ageing of the population and proportion of rural population are the only non-income factors, which exert a significant positive impact on real per capita health expenditure. This is particularly important given the demographic transition that India is passing through.

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