Exploring the relationship between healthcare expenditure, income, medical technology, and aging: A pooled mean group analysis of African countries
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Abstract
This paper empirically examines the short and long-run relationships among healthcare
expenditure, income, medical technology, and an aging population in a panel of 45 African
countries over the period 1995-2018. We test for cross-sectional dependence among
different countries and employ the pooled mean group estimator. The results support the
presence of cross-sectional dependence in African countries and reveal that healthcare
expenditure, income, medical technology, and aging population have a long-run
relationship. Medical technology and an aging population are key drivers of healthcare
expenditure in the low-income group as well as the middle-income group. The long-run
income elasticities of healthcare expenditure are less than one for both income groups.
Finally, we found bidirectional causality between healthcare expenditure and its
determinants. Healthcare expenditure is considered a necessity for African countries.
Nevertheless, low-income countries have higher income elasticities for private health
expenditure compared to middle-income countries. We suggest that African
governments should increase public healthcare spending since healthcare spending is a
necessity. This increase will lead to growth in income and medical technology
development, which will have a beneficial impact on health status.
