Aggregate health expenditures as a share of GDP have risen in the United States from about 5 percent in 1960 to nearly 14 percent in recent years. Why? This paper explores a simple explanation based on technological progress. Technological advances allow diseases to be cured today, at a cost, that could not be cured at any price in the past. When this technological progress is combined with a Medicare-like transfer program to pay the health expenses of the elderly, the model is able to reproduce the basic facts of recent U.S. experience, including the large increase in the health expenditure share, a rise in life expectancy, and an increase in the size of health-related transfer payments as a share of GDP
To what extent can rising per capita health expenditures be attributed to the changing age compositi...
In this paper, we investigate the determinants of growth of aggregate health expenditures. The study...
In the United States, health care technology has contributed to rising survival rates, yet health ca...
In this paper, I develop a quantitative macroeconomic model of health spending and use it as a frame...
This paper offers an integrated view of the relationships between health spending, medical innovatio...
In recent decades, spending on healthcare in the U.S. has continued to rise to unprecedented levels,...
The last 40 years have seen a rapid increase of government expenditures on public welfare arrangemen...
We estimate a stochastic life-cycle model of endogenous health spending, asset accumulation and reti...
In this paper we evaluate the respective effects of demographic change, changes in morbidity and cha...
We use a calibrated stochastic life-cycle model of endogenous health spending, asset accumulation an...
Are health expenditures rising for reasons other than waste or fraud? If so, do these reasons porten...
Both private and public payers have experienced a persistent rise in health care spending that has e...
On the basis of French individual data, this paper compares the effects of demographic change, chang...
Over the past half century, Americans spent a rising share of total economic resources on health and...
We analyze the influence of technological progress on pharmaceuticals on rising health expenditures ...
To what extent can rising per capita health expenditures be attributed to the changing age compositi...
In this paper, we investigate the determinants of growth of aggregate health expenditures. The study...
In the United States, health care technology has contributed to rising survival rates, yet health ca...
In this paper, I develop a quantitative macroeconomic model of health spending and use it as a frame...
This paper offers an integrated view of the relationships between health spending, medical innovatio...
In recent decades, spending on healthcare in the U.S. has continued to rise to unprecedented levels,...
The last 40 years have seen a rapid increase of government expenditures on public welfare arrangemen...
We estimate a stochastic life-cycle model of endogenous health spending, asset accumulation and reti...
In this paper we evaluate the respective effects of demographic change, changes in morbidity and cha...
We use a calibrated stochastic life-cycle model of endogenous health spending, asset accumulation an...
Are health expenditures rising for reasons other than waste or fraud? If so, do these reasons porten...
Both private and public payers have experienced a persistent rise in health care spending that has e...
On the basis of French individual data, this paper compares the effects of demographic change, chang...
Over the past half century, Americans spent a rising share of total economic resources on health and...
We analyze the influence of technological progress on pharmaceuticals on rising health expenditures ...
To what extent can rising per capita health expenditures be attributed to the changing age compositi...
In this paper, we investigate the determinants of growth of aggregate health expenditures. The study...
In the United States, health care technology has contributed to rising survival rates, yet health ca...