Earnings and the elusive dividends of health

http://idbdocs.iadb.org/wsdocs/getdocument.aspx?docnum=788037

The paper presents a methodology for estimating the impact of health on earnings that addresses problems of measurement error and endogeneity, then summarizes the main findings of related studies undertaken as part of a larger project. These studies show that health status does have a significant, although modest, impact on earnings in four Latin American countries.This paper looks at the relationship between health and income. After discussing the general context of health improvements in Latin America during the last few decades, the study elaborates on the interrelationships between the physical and social determinants of health, the complexities that arise in attributing earnings differentials to variations in health status, and the difficulties of accurately measuring health status.Furthermore, environmental conditions (such as housing and sanitation) appear to have significant impacts on health status, compared to health services and public health facilities, which show little influence. The universally strong relationship between education and earnings is only modestly reduced by the inclusion of health status despite a general expectation that estimated returns to education were, in part, capturing the frequently unmeasured effects of health.

Author(s): Savedoff, William D., Schultz, Paul T. Originator(s): Inter-American Development Bank, Yale University
Resource added in: 15/12/2000
Available languages: English
Embryonic Germ Cells, Telocytes, Socioeconomics Factors, Equity, Living Conditions
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