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From health to wealth

From health to wealth. Thorvaldur Gylfason. What is at issue?. Good health is crucial to individual and social welfare around the world Health expenditure in OECD-area is nearly 600 euros per month for each family of four Education expenditure is similar

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From health to wealth

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  1. From health to wealth Thorvaldur Gylfason

  2. What is at issue? Good health is crucial to individual and social welfare around the world • Health expenditure in OECD-area is nearly 600 euros per month for each family of four • Education expenditure is similar Need to distinguish input from output • Expenditure is input into health care • The output is the health care itself • Output is key, input is not

  3. Same applies to education Expenditure on health care Expenditure is a poor indicator of output because its efficiency is uneven Iceland: substantial hike in expenditure, but chronic shortage of health care • Queues, central planning: inefficient Allocation of resources in health care could be made more efficient through market solutions • Greater efficiency means more and better care for given resources

  4. Same applies to education Expenditure on health care Allocation of resources is more efficient in a market economy, requiring • More private enterprise • More competition between providers • More allocation by price • Keener awareness of cost Central planning is not an efficient way of securing greater social equality • There are better ways, through social insurance, education, and fiscal policies

  5. Public expenditure on health care 2001 (% of GDP) Iceland, with its young population, in first place within OECD Other Nordics, with older populations, near middle or below Adjusted for age distribution of population

  6. Private expenditure on health care 2001 (% of GDP) US in class of its own Canada around average, behind Switzerland, Australia, and the Netherlands All Nordic countries below average Adjusted for age distribution of population

  7. Total expenditure on health care 2001 (% of GDP) • Composition varies greatly across countries • 1:1 in US, Korea, and Switzerland • 1:3 on average • 1:6 in Nordic countries and Japan Adjusted for age distribution of population

  8. Total expenditure on health care 2002 (% of GDP) Huge expenditures, with persistent upward trend due in part to medical progress Makes a difference how well these expenditures are managed Classic question of efficiency in allocation of scarce resources Not adjusted for age distribution of population

  9. Health, human capital, and economic growth Good health is crucial to individual and social welfare around the world Does public health also matter for economic performance and growth? • Human capital is good for growth • Education and health augment and improve human capital, and growth • Living standards are determined by growth and nothing else, by definition

  10. Growth differentials Country B: 2% per year • Economic system • Economic policy • Efficiency • Health? Nearly threefold difference after 60 years National income per capita Country A: 0,4% per year 60 0 Years

  11. Main determinants of growth I Adam Smith 1776 + + Physical capital and human capital are good for growth denotes positive effect +

  12. Main determinants of growth II + + + + – + Not certain that poor countries grow faster than rich denotes positive effect + + denotes negative effect –

  13. Main determinants of growth III + + + + – – + – Natural resource dependence tends to hurt investment and education denotes positive effect + + denotes negative effect –

  14. Main determinants of growth IV + + + + – ? – + – Does public health matter for economic growth? denotes positive effect + + denotes negative effect –

  15. Birth care and national income r = rank correlation Luxembourg r = 0.80 USA OECD Health and income go hand in hand 157 countries

  16. Female education and birth care Education and health go hand in hand r = 0.89 132 countries

  17. Natural resource dependence and birth care Health is inversely related to primary production (and directly related to living standards) r = -0.62 163 countries

  18. Birth care and growth Medical care is good for growth, even if the effects of education as well as initial income on growth are also taken into account r = 0.50 Medical care is good for growth and vice versa 157 countries

  19. Life expectancy and growth Medical care is good for growth Long lives are good for growth and vice versa r = 0.60 Here, causation runs from life expectancy to growth 147 countries

  20. Health expenditure and economic growth An increase in health expenditure by 2.5% of GDP goes along with an increase in growth per capita by 1% per year r = 0.42 Health expenditure is good for growth and vice versa: Same story 163 countries

  21. Reading the charts Growth Growth Health = + Health Education Education Education helps both growth and public health, so health and growth go hand in hand

  22. Another interpretation Growth Growth Health = + Education Education Health Education spurs growth, and good health is also good for growth, so education and growth go hand in hand

  23. These slides are accessible on my website: www.hi.is/~gylfason In conclusion Health care, like education, helps build human capital Disease and ignorance impede economic growth The End Individual and social welfare depends mostly on human capital, not natural capital Public policy needs to encourage efficient allocation of resources in health care More market solutions, less central planning

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