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Title: | IMPACT OF HEALTH SECTOR SPENDING ON INFANT/MATERNAL MORTALITY IN NIGERIA (1980-2016 |
Authors: | ADEBISI, EMMANUEL PELUMI OGBUAGU, MATTHEW. I. |
Keywords: | Economic Growth ARDL Millennium Development Goal Infant Mortality Maternal Mortality Health Expenditure |
Issue Date: | 12-Nov-2018 |
Publisher: | FEDERAL UNIVERSITY OYE EKITI |
Citation: | Acemoglu, D., Johnson, S., Robinson, J.A., & Yared, P. (2005). From education to democracy?National Bureau of Economic Research. |
Series/Report no.: | EDS/14/1867; |
Abstract: | A key element of public policy is the promotion of good health in order to attain broad based economic growth. Based on this paradigm, many countries devote huge budgetary allocation to health. However, in most developing countries, this huge health expenditure failed to translate into better health status. Thus, this paper investigates how the effectiveness of public health expenditure is affected by governance in Nigeria. Data on public health expenditure is regressed on infant-mortality ratio using the Autoregressive Distribution Lag Model Approach. Thus, the result obtained shows that public health expenditure has negative effect on infant-maternal mortality ratio. Thisstudy therefore point to a greater role for multilateral development banks like the African Development Bank (AFDB). Apart from increased use of sector-wide approaches (SWAPs), other instruments of intervention in regional member countries (RMCs) include: budget support for resource transfer to the national budget, on the basis of long-term, trusting, partnerships; policy dialogue in poverty reduction strategy and assistance strategy for a about the priority due to pro-poor social sector programs in public expenditure allocations, with due recognition of the needs of evolving programs of action; sector-level dialogue on sector strategies and their implementation. |
Description: | This study examined the impact of health sector spending on infant-maternal mortality ratio
in Nigeria using annual time series data over the period of 1980 to 2016. The contribution of
the life expectancy (health outcomes) to economic progress of any economy has been well
established in the development literature. This study made use of the recent bounds testing
cointegration approach developed within the framework of the Autoregressive Distributed
Lag (ARDL) econometric procedure to determine the long-run relationship between public
spending on health and its outcomes in Nigeria. |
URI: | http://repository.fuoye.edu.ng/handle/123456789/1492 |
ISSN: | EDS/14/1867 |
Appears in Collections: | Economics and Development Thesis
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