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dc.description.abstractThis paper empirically investigates the relationship between health expenditures, health outcomes and economic growth in Africa using data from 48 African countries over the period 2000-2015 in a panel data regression framework. In line with wider literature on economic growth as well as health economics, the paper first finds that maternal, infant and child mortality rates are all negatively and significantly associated with economic growth in Africa. In addition, life expectancy at birth is positively associated with economic growth. A 9.4-year increase in life expectancy leads to 1 per cent increase in real GDP per capita. Second, the paper finds that health expenditures have direct and indirect effects on economic growth that are positive and economically meaningful. In particular, a 10 per cent increase in health expenditures leads to an increase in annual average real GDP per capita by 0.24 per cent. Third, education emerges as a strong determinant of both economic growth and health outcomes in Africa, particularly when female education is considered. The main policy implication of this paper is that governments should aim at spending more and efficiently on the overall health system to progress over health outcomes and benefit from the positive externalities leading to economic growth. In addition, it is crucial that governments partner with private sector for resource mobilization and effective service deliveryen
dc.titleExploring the impact of healthcare on Economic growth in Africaen
dc.title.alternativeVol. 6, No. 3; May 2019.en
uneca.subject.fulltaxonomyUNBIS::HEALTH::COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH SERVICES::HEALTH PLANNINGen
uneca.subject.fulltaxonomyUNBIS::HEALTH::COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH SERVICES::HEALTH ECONOMICSen
uneca.subject.fulltaxonomyUNBIS::SOCIAL CONDITIONS AND EQUITY::HUMAN RIGHTSen
uneca.subject.fulltaxonomyUNBIS::HEALTH::COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH SERVICES::HEALTH POLICYen
uneca.subject.fulltaxonomyUNBIS::GEOGRAPHICAL DESCRIPTORS::AFRICAen
uneca.subject.fulltaxonomyUNBIS::GEOGRAPHICAL DESCRIPTORS::AFRICAen
uneca.creatorCorporate.fulltaxonomyCorporate Authors::United Nations. Economic Commission for Africaen
ags.creatorCorporateUnited Nations. Economic Commission for Africaen
ags.subjectThesaurusHEALTH PLANNINGen
ags.subjectThesaurusHEALTH ECONOMICSen
ags.subjectThesaurusHUMAN RIGHTSen
ags.subjectThesaurusHEALTH POLICYen
ags.subjectThesaurusAFRICAen
ags.subjectThesaurusAFRICAen
ags.descriptionNotesApplied Economics and Finance.en
ags.descriptionNotesCorrespondence: Juste Somé, Department of Economics, Université Norbert Zongo, Koudougou, Burkina Faso.en
ags.descriptionNotesIncludes bibliographical reference.en
ags.publisherPlaceAddis Ababaen
ags.publisherNameUN.ECAen
dc.date.accessioned2022-07-26T07:07:48Z
dc.date.available2022-07-26T07:07:48Z
dc.date.issued2019
dc.identifier.issn2332-7294
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10855/47824
uneca.workflow.processedtrue
ags.creatorPersonalJuste, Some
ags.creatorPersonalSelsah, Pasali
ags.creatorPersonalMartin, Kaboine
uneca.language.supporteden
dc.format.extent45-57 p.: ill.
dc.languageeng
dc.typeReports
ags.creatorCorporateUnited Nations. Economic Commission for Africa
ags.subjectThesaurusHEALTH PLANNING
ags.subjectThesaurusHEALTH ECONOMICS
ags.subjectThesaurusHUMAN RIGHTS
ags.subjectThesaurusHEALTH POLICY
ags.subjectThesaurusAFRICA
ags.subjectClassification02.02.00 ECONOMIC CONDITIONS
ags.availabilityNumberb11999457
ags.availabilityNumber2019
ags.availabilityLocationECA-HQ
ags.rights.termsofusepublic
ags.JNb11999457


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