Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5087445 | Journal of Asian Economics | 2010 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
In this paper, we investigate the relationship between health and economic growth through including investment, exports, imports, and research and development (R&D), for 5 Asian countries using panel unit root, panel cointegration with structural breaks and panel long-run estimator for the period 1974-2007. We model this relationship within the production function framework, and unravel two important results. First, we find that in all four variants of the growth model, variables share a long-run relationship; that is, they are cointegrated. Second, we find that in the long-run, while health, investment, exports, EDRD (the interaction term between education and R&D), and R&D have contributed positively to economic growth, imports have had a statistically significant negative effect while education has had an insignificant effect. We draw important policy implications from these findings.
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Authors
Seema Narayan, Paresh Kumar Narayan, Sagarika Mishra,