Piabuo Serge Mandiefe, Tieguhong Julius Chupezi
World Agroforestry Centre (ICRAF), Yaounde, Cameroon.
Health Econ Rev. 2017 Dec;7(1):23. doi: 10.1186/s13561-017-0159-1. Epub 2017 Jun 7.
African leaders accepted in the year 2001 through the Abuja Declaration to allocate 15% of their government expenditure on health but by 2013 only five (5) African countries achieved this target. In this paper, a comparative analysis on the impact of health expenditure between countries in the CEMAC sub-region and five other African countries that achieved the Abuja declaration is provided. Data for this study was extracted from the World Development Indicators (2016) database, panel ordinary least square (OLS), fully modified ordinary least square (FMOLS) and dynamic ordinary least square (DOLS) were used as econometric technic of analysis. Results showed that health expenditure has a positive and significant effect on economic growth in both samples. A unit change in health expenditure can potentially increase GDP per capita by 0.38 and 0.3 units for the five other African countries that achieve the Abuja target and for CEMAC countries respectively, a significant difference of 0.08 units among the two samples. In addition, a long-run relationship also exist between health expenditure and economic growth for both groups of countries. Thus African Economies are strongly advised to achieve the Abuja target especially when other socio-economic and political factors are efficient.
非洲各国领导人于2001年通过《阿布贾宣言》,同意将政府卫生支出的15%用于卫生领域,但到2013年,只有五个非洲国家实现了这一目标。本文对中部非洲经济与货币共同体(CEMAC)次区域国家与其他五个实现了《阿布贾宣言》目标的非洲国家的卫生支出影响进行了比较分析。本研究的数据取自《世界发展指标(2016)》数据库,采用面板普通最小二乘法(OLS)、完全修正普通最小二乘法(FMOLS)和动态普通最小二乘法(DOLS)作为计量分析技术。结果表明,卫生支出对两个样本的经济增长均有积极且显著的影响。对于其他五个实现了阿布贾目标的非洲国家和CEMAC国家,卫生支出每变动一个单位,人均GDP可能分别增加0.38和0.3个单位,两个样本之间存在0.08个单位的显著差异。此外,两组国家的卫生支出与经济增长之间也存在长期关系。因此,强烈建议非洲各国实现阿布贾目标,尤其是在其他社会经济和政治因素有效的情况下。