2018
DOI: 10.26493/1854-6935.16.195-214
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Is Health Care Necessity or Luxury Good? Panel Data Analysis on the Example of the SEEHN Countries

Abstract: The main goal of this paper is oriented on examining the potential link between economic growth and health expenditure in the South-Eastern European Health Network (seehn) countries over the period 1995-2014 by applying panel econometrics. The panel co-integration testing approach and panel vecm are used to investigate the long-and short-run causality between the economic growth, health expenditure and life expectancy (trivariate model). The empirical results show that there is a long-run relationship between … Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…The findings collide with Hassan et al (53) but are in line with some other studies (36,(54)(55)(56). In another study using the panel data method; Baltagi et al (57) stated that the size of income elasticity depends on the geo-political position of different countries in the global income distribution, with poorer countries showing higher elasticity. Obradović and Lojanica (58) accomplish a study on South-Eastern European Health Network countries which shows that in the long run, the income elasticity of healthcare expenditure is greater than unity and states healthcare can be considered a luxury good.…”
Section: Parkin Et Al (9)mentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The findings collide with Hassan et al (53) but are in line with some other studies (36,(54)(55)(56). In another study using the panel data method; Baltagi et al (57) stated that the size of income elasticity depends on the geo-political position of different countries in the global income distribution, with poorer countries showing higher elasticity. Obradović and Lojanica (58) accomplish a study on South-Eastern European Health Network countries which shows that in the long run, the income elasticity of healthcare expenditure is greater than unity and states healthcare can be considered a luxury good.…”
Section: Parkin Et Al (9)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In another study using the panel data method; Baltagi et al ( 57 ) stated that the size of income elasticity depends on the geo-political position of different countries in the global income distribution, with poorer countries showing higher elasticity. Obradović and Lojanica ( 58 ) accomplish a study on South-Eastern European Health Network countries which shows that in the long run, the income elasticity of healthcare expenditure is greater than unity and states healthcare can be considered a luxury good. Additionally, the study reveals that the elasticity of healthcare expenditure relative to income is less than unity in the short run, which means that healthcare is a necessary product over the short term.…”
Section: Related Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%