About the journal

Cobiss

Panoeconomicus 2017 Volume 64, Issue 4, Pages: 439-459
https://doi.org/10.2298/PAN150505020M
Full text ( 465 KB)
Cited by


New evidence of the health status and economic growth relationship

Monterubbianesi Pablo Daniel
Grandes Martín
Dabús Carlos

Over the last two decades, the role of health as a determinant of growth has been gaining ground in economic analysis due to longer average life expectancy at birth or lower infant mortality experienced in developing and fast-growing emerging economies. The empirical approach to this problem, based primarily on econometric analysis, has focused on two alternative approaches; the growth accounting models and the “a la Barro” regressions. This study aims to measure the contribution of health to economic growth using a panel of 91 countries over the period 1960-2005, and to compare the estimated impact of better health status on long-run per capita income under those two approaches, controlling for potential endogeneity. Our main results show the marginal effect of the change in health status in the long-term income lies between 2.6% in the growth accounting models and 8.3% in the “a la Barro” regressions. These results are consistent with the marginal effects we simulate and quantify using the health-growth point estimates found in earlier literature.

Keywords: health status, economic growth, long-run income, growth account, "a la Barro" regressions