Department of Humanities and Social Sciences, Indian Institute of Technology Delhi, Hauz Khas, New Delhi, 110016, India.
Soc Sci Med. 2020 Jan;244:112429. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2019.112429. Epub 2019 Jul 22.
In-spite of being the largest democracy in the world, Indian states are spending only around 1% of net state domestic product on public healthcare which is way lower than the world average. This low level of public healthcare spending resulted in a high out of pocket healthcare spending and poor health outcome in India. But democratically elected governments are responsible for spending significant amount of their budget on healthcare for the benefit of the masses. It is generally believed that, in a democracy, political competition drives the elected government to spend more on healthcare, education, infrastructure, etc. for the welfare of the citizens. This is especially true in developing countries, like India, where a significant section of population is poor. We empirically argue that intense political competition forces the incumbent government to spend more on public healthcare in order to win the election. Empirical analysis is done by creating a state level panel of 16 major Indian states, covering a span of two decades (1991-2011).
尽管印度是世界上最大的民主国家,但印度各邦在公共医疗保健上的支出仅占净国内生产总值的 1%左右,远低于世界平均水平。这种低水平的公共医疗保健支出导致印度的医疗保健自费支出高,健康状况不佳。但民选政府有责任将大量预算用于医疗保健,造福民众。人们普遍认为,在民主国家,政治竞争促使当选政府在医疗保健、教育、基础设施等方面投入更多资金,以造福公民。在印度这样的发展中国家尤其如此,那里相当一部分人口贫困。我们从经验上认为,激烈的政治竞争迫使现任政府在公共医疗保健上投入更多资金,以赢得选举。通过创建一个涵盖 20 年(1991-2011 年)的 16 个主要印度邦的州级面板进行实证分析。