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The cyclical behaviour of public and private health expenditure in China

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The cyclical behaviour of public and private health expenditure in China. / Chen, Gang; Inder, Brett; Lorgelly, Paula et al.
In: Health Economics, Vol. 22, No. 9, 09.2013, p. 1071-1092.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Chen, G, Inder, B, Lorgelly, P & Hollingsworth, B 2013, 'The cyclical behaviour of public and private health expenditure in China', Health Economics, vol. 22, no. 9, pp. 1071-1092. https://doi.org/10.1002/hec.2957

APA

Vancouver

Chen G, Inder B, Lorgelly P, Hollingsworth B. The cyclical behaviour of public and private health expenditure in China. Health Economics. 2013 Sept;22(9):1071-1092. Epub 2013 Jul 8. doi: 10.1002/hec.2957

Author

Chen, Gang ; Inder, Brett ; Lorgelly, Paula et al. / The cyclical behaviour of public and private health expenditure in China. In: Health Economics. 2013 ; Vol. 22, No. 9. pp. 1071-1092.

Bibtex

@article{0cb0278e20f44ff29c50125ed80c2cd3,
title = "The cyclical behaviour of public and private health expenditure in China",
abstract = "This paper studies short-run cyclical behaviour of public (government and social) and private health expenditure and GDP using both time series and panel data techniques. First, national time series data have been used within a multivariate Beveridge–Nelson decomposition framework to construct the permanent and cyclical components. The correlation analysis results for the cyclical components suggest that current public health expenditure is pro-cyclical while there is no clear evidence of a correlation between cycles in private health expenditure and in GDP growth. Next, using an instrumental variable method and the generalised method of moments estimator, provincial-level panel data analyses confirm pro-cyclical impacts of government spending on health. The provincial analysis also suggests that private health expenditure in urban China has a pro-cyclical association with GDP growth, but a lack of good instruments makes it difficult to identify a clear causal link between cycles in income growth and private health expenditure. The results suggest two policy recommendations relevant to public health expenditure, in line with China's current health reforms.",
keywords = "China, health expenditure, economic fluctuations",
author = "Gang Chen and Brett Inder and Paula Lorgelly and Bruce Hollingsworth",
year = "2013",
month = sep,
doi = "10.1002/hec.2957",
language = "English",
volume = "22",
pages = "1071--1092",
journal = "Health Economics",
issn = "1057-9230",
publisher = "John Wiley and Sons Ltd",
number = "9",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The cyclical behaviour of public and private health expenditure in China

AU - Chen, Gang

AU - Inder, Brett

AU - Lorgelly, Paula

AU - Hollingsworth, Bruce

PY - 2013/9

Y1 - 2013/9

N2 - This paper studies short-run cyclical behaviour of public (government and social) and private health expenditure and GDP using both time series and panel data techniques. First, national time series data have been used within a multivariate Beveridge–Nelson decomposition framework to construct the permanent and cyclical components. The correlation analysis results for the cyclical components suggest that current public health expenditure is pro-cyclical while there is no clear evidence of a correlation between cycles in private health expenditure and in GDP growth. Next, using an instrumental variable method and the generalised method of moments estimator, provincial-level panel data analyses confirm pro-cyclical impacts of government spending on health. The provincial analysis also suggests that private health expenditure in urban China has a pro-cyclical association with GDP growth, but a lack of good instruments makes it difficult to identify a clear causal link between cycles in income growth and private health expenditure. The results suggest two policy recommendations relevant to public health expenditure, in line with China's current health reforms.

AB - This paper studies short-run cyclical behaviour of public (government and social) and private health expenditure and GDP using both time series and panel data techniques. First, national time series data have been used within a multivariate Beveridge–Nelson decomposition framework to construct the permanent and cyclical components. The correlation analysis results for the cyclical components suggest that current public health expenditure is pro-cyclical while there is no clear evidence of a correlation between cycles in private health expenditure and in GDP growth. Next, using an instrumental variable method and the generalised method of moments estimator, provincial-level panel data analyses confirm pro-cyclical impacts of government spending on health. The provincial analysis also suggests that private health expenditure in urban China has a pro-cyclical association with GDP growth, but a lack of good instruments makes it difficult to identify a clear causal link between cycles in income growth and private health expenditure. The results suggest two policy recommendations relevant to public health expenditure, in line with China's current health reforms.

KW - China

KW - health expenditure

KW - economic fluctuations

U2 - 10.1002/hec.2957

DO - 10.1002/hec.2957

M3 - Journal article

VL - 22

SP - 1071

EP - 1092

JO - Health Economics

JF - Health Economics

SN - 1057-9230

IS - 9

ER -