Examining the state level heterogeneity of public health expenditure in Indi a: an empirical evidence from panel data
Published By: International Journal of Healthcare Technology and | Published Date: 2018This study explores the relationship over an extended period of time
between an increase in per capita public health expenditure and
per capita
state’s domestic product (per capita income) of 16 states of India from 1980 to
2014. We consider eight panels of
states based on geographical
region and
levels of economic development for examining the level of heterogeneity in the
share of public health expenditure with respect to states’ domestic product by
using panel unit root, panel co-integration and panel Granger causality
techniques. The empirical result shows that public health expenditure and
states’ domestic product are co-integrated in the long-run. The
result also
shows a positive and significant effect of per capita income in
the growth of
public health expenditure in the long-run. It finds that there
is a bi-directional
Granger causality between per capita income and public health expenditure in
the short-run while the causality is unidirectional in the long
-run. The overall
result implies the existence of inequalities in the share of government health
expenditure with respect to state’s level of economic development in India.
This study would offer effective
fiscal policy instruments to minimising
geographical inequity of health finance for achieving universal
health coverage
of Indian states.
Author(s): Deepak Kumar Behera | Posted on: May 16, 2018 | Views()