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HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon
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WP2 WP1
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Health shocks - Labor supply - Income (earned and unearned) - Medical spending Food consumption Non-food consumption - Health insurance - Coping methods: - Saving - Gift - Borrowing/loan - Asset - Social insurance/security - Informal solidarity Consumption insurance Financial risks
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Paper 3
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Which kind of insurance can protect welfare loss? For common minor illnesses vs. for unanticipated major illnesses First-dollar coverage with low capped benefits vs. catastrophic insurance with patient cost-sharing 1 1 Townsend (1995); Kochar (1995) found families in LICs were able to insure illness shocks fairly well.
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Objective
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Findings Section III: Section IV:
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Panel data
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Fixed-effects model
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(1) ADLs vs. (2) Self-reported illness symptoms Symptom lasting > 1 mo. Any symptom 1. 2.1 2.2 1.1 1.2 mean (SD) % mean (SD) h ij
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Problems on self-reported illnesses
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L ij 3. 2. 1.1 1.2 X ij Labor supply /wk This has to be imputed for informal sectors per wk (C/n) ij
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h ij X ij L ij (1.1) 2.1 2.2 1. per wk Section III
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h ij 2.1 2.2 1. L ij 1.1 1.2 2. 3. per wk Interpretation: Moving from being able to perform all ADLs to being able to perform none would result in - lowering hours of work by 30.9 hours per week (84% of baseline mean hours) - 73.8% likelihood of becoming labor-force nonparticipant - a reduction of earnings by Rp.20,170 (~ baseline mean earnings) - an increase in medical spending of Rp.1,180
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Section III
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Section IV: Consumption insurance
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ln(C/n) ij h ij X ij 2.1 2.2 1. Moving from being able to perform all ADLs to being able to perform none would lower consumption by 19.5%
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Section IV
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Section V: The extent to which households are able to insure consumption Biased est.: For each Rp. that income falls, consumption falls by only 3% Unbiased est.: For each Rp. that income falls, consumption falls by 35% Households are able to insure only 65% of the consumption with respect to income loss due to a loss in ADL
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Instrument Variable (IV) Y = 1 + 1 h + Z 1 + 1 C = 2 + 2 + X 2 + 2 Predicted Y as an instrument Step 1. Income Step 2. Consumption C = 0 + 0 Y + X 0 + 0 OLS method Y is endogenous: some unobserved variables affect both Y and C. Hence, Is biased (change in Y affecting change in C is spurious). Consumption: IV method
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Paper 4
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S ht-1
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1.1 1.2 1. 2. 3.1 3.2 ln y ht 1. 2.1 2.2 3. S ht-1 XhtXht e.g., gift, remittance, pension, compensation e.g., wage/salary, agriculture, family business esp., direct, nonmedical costs of care
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yhtyht
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Rural Urban Effects on income per household An urban household’s earned income is more vulnerable to death shocks than an rural household’s. Statistically non-significant Regression coefficient and (t-statistics) Statistically non-significant An increase in unearned income offsets a decrease in earned income; whereby other-than death shocks in urban area are larger than in rural area.
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Urban Rural Effects on income per capita Effect of a death on per capita income Is statistically non-significant and is less than on household income.
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Effects on medical expenditure (1) Urban Rural
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Effects on medical expenditure (2) Insured Uninsured
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Effects on food consumption Rural Urban Households cannot smooth their food consumption in the face of some health shocks!
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Effects on non-food/non-medical consumption Urban Rural The evidence is more mixed!
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Pr (y>0) E[ y| y>0] (Housing)
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Health shocks Year 2004-05 (wave 1: N = 5,673) Year 2005-06 (wave 2: N = 5,495) % Dead: Any HH members0% 2.3% % Ill: Any HH members57.0%53.8% % Ill: HH head37.8%35.1% % Ill: Other than head19.1%18.7% % Ill: Working member43.4%40.7% % Hospitalized: Any HH members21.3%NA % Hospitalized: HH head10.3%NA % Hospitalized: Other than head11.0%NA % Hospitalized: Working member14.7%NA
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Economic consequences Year 2005-06 (wave 2) Year 2006-07 (wave 3) Mean Unearned income (Baht) 911 992 Mean Earned income (Baht) 4,357 4,664 Mean Total income (Baht) 5,269 5,656 % Catastrophic health exp. (>10% total exp.)3.3% % Positive health exp.57.3%51.0% Mean Health exp. (Baht), given positive 98 104 Mean Food expenditure (Baht) 1,173 1,260 Mean Nonfood/non-health exp. (Baht) 1,867 2,186 % Positive education exp.56.2%55.8% Mean Education exp. (Baht), given positive 269 289
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Covariates for adjustment Year 2006Year 2007 % Urban 29.1%31.7% % Rural 70.9%68.3% % Bangkok 15.8%17.1% % Central 16.9%17.4% % North 19.1%19.4% % Northeast 35.2%35.0% % South 12.9%11.1% Mean Age (years) 51.551.8 % Male 70.1% % Couple 73.9%75.2% % Primary educated 73.9%71.2% % Secondary educated 14.2%15.2% % Higher educated11.8%13.6% Household head
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Effect on per capita income Thailand –whole country Health shock UnearnedEarnedTotal Dead: Any HH members 0.778-0.3330.053 Ill: Any HH members0.5560.2590.073 Ill: HH head0.5750.3010.208 Ill: Other than head0.040-0.027-0.175 Ill: Working member0.3570.1430.083 Hospitalized: Any HH members0.4880.0970.223 Hospitalized: HH head0.641-0.2010.219 Hospitalized: Other than head0.2350.3550.176 Hospitalized: Working member0.380-0.0200.184
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Effect on per capita income Thailand –urban vs. rural Health shock UnearnedEarnedTotal Dead: Any HH members 0.745-0.943-0.393 Hospitalized: Any HH members0.652-0.153-0.037 Hospitalized: HH head0.536-0.4380.017 Hospitalized: Other than head0.6170.142-0.078 Hospitalized: Working member0.280-0.118-0.027 Dead: Any HH members 0.751-0.1060.177 Hospitalized: Any HH members0.4480.1830.334 Hospitalized: HH head0.698-0.1390.289 Hospitalized: Other than head0.1080.4440.299 Hospitalized: Working member0.414-0.0230.233 Rural Urban
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Effect on per capita health spending (W2) Thailand –whole country Health shock (W1) Catast. exp. Positive exp. Exp. if positive Overall exp. Ill: Any HH members0.0090.0880.1360.767 Ill: HH head0.0070.0700.1080.611 Ill: Other than head0.0040.0340.0460.302 Ill: Working member0.0110.0890.1350.775 Hospitalized: Any HH members0.0170.0530.1540.517 Hospitalized: HH head0.0170.0520.2080.528 Hospitalized: Other than head0.0140.0420.0660.390 Hospitalized: Working member0.0180.0490.1700.488
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Effect on per capita health spending (W2) Thailand –urban vs. rural Health shock (W1) Catast. exp. Positive exp. Exp. if positive Overall exp. Hospitalized: Any HH members 0.0200.0390.2270.478 Hospitalized: HH head 0.0260.0240.3060.407 Hospitalized: Other than head 0.0090.0440.1070.439 Hospitalized: Working member 0.0030.0150.0700.176 Hospitalized: Any HH members 0.0170.0580.1300.530 Hospitalized: HH head 0.0130.0620.1740.569 Hospitalized: Other than head 0.0160.0420.0540.371 Hospitalized: Working member 0.0230.0590.2080.580 Rural Urban
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Effect on per capita health spending (W3) Thailand –CS vs. SS vs. UC Health shock (W2) Catast. exp. Positive exp. Exp. if positive Overall exp. Ill: Any HH members 0.0240.1220.2101.092 Ill: HH head 0.00070.0420.2130.435 Ill: Any HH members 0.0170.0700.1670.655 Ill: HH head 0.0040.0700.1820.627 Ill: Any HH members 0.0160.0680.2920.695 Ill: HH head 0.0180.0470.3260.549 UC SS CS
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Effect on per capita non-health spending Thailand –whole country Health shock FoodNonfood Dead: Any HH members-0.1240.216 Ill: Any HH members-0.0300.005 Ill: HH head0.0260.059 Ill: Other than head-0.079-0.073 Ill: Working member-0.00040.062 Hospitalized: Any HH members-0.098-0.073 Hospitalized: HH head-0.058-0.009 Hospitalized: Other than head-0.114-0.116 Hospitalized: Working member-0.0800.005
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Effect on per capita non-health spending Thailand –urban vs. rural Health shock FoodNonfood Dead: Any HH members-0.115-0.324 Hospitalized: Any HH members-0.104-0.215 Hospitalized: HH head0.024-0.099 Hospitalized: Other than head-0.198-0.275 Hospitalized: Working member-0.032-0.083 Dead: Any HH members-0.1200.415 Hospitalized: Any HH members-0.100-0.026 Hospitalized: HH head-0.0900.017 Hospitalized: Other than head-0.086-0.060 Hospitalized: Working member-0.0990.029 Rural Urban
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Effect on per capita education spending Thailand –whole country Health shock Positive exp. Exp. if positive Overall exp. Dead: Any HH members-0.043-0.164-0.432 Ill: Any HH members-0.0260.028-0.214 Ill: HH head-0.0360.057-0.304 Ill: Other than head0.012-0.0290.098 Ill: Working member-0.0570.062-0.465 Hospitalized: Any HH members-0.024-0.057-0.248 Hospitalized: HH head-0.0260.063-0.198 Hospitalized: Other than head-0.017-0.144-0.239 Hospitalized: Working member-0.0480.070-0.385
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Effect on per capita education spending Thailand –urban vs. rural Health shock Positive exp. Exp. if positive Overall exp. Dead: Any HH members-0.045-0.426-0.608 Hospitalized: Any HH members-0.073-0.318-0.832 Hospitalized: HH head-0.058-0.236-0.614 Hospitalized: Other than head-0.072-0.331-0.852 Hospitalized: Working member-0.098-0.149-0.991 Dead: Any HH members-0.039-0.109-0.345 Hospitalized: Any HH members-0.0070.020-0.037 Hospitalized: HH head-0.0140.147-0.052 Hospitalized: Other than head0.002-0.089-0.015 Hospitalized: Working member-0.0290.129-0.166 Rural Urban
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VHLSS (Vietnam Household Living Standards Survey) Coping Strategies Source: VHLSS 2006 Report
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Paper 5
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(coping strategies) C = 2,580/2,760 = 0.93 Mean of proportion of exp. financed by coping Coping-adjusted health expenditure ratio (P) (High spending households) P = unadjusted C
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Cumulative distributions of health expenditure ratios w = Unadjusted; P = Coping-adjusted (w) (P)
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