YesNon-communicable diseases (NCDs) are currently the leading cause of death worldwide. In this paper, we examine the channels through which economic growth affects NCDs’ epidemiology. Following a production function approach, we develop a basic technique to break up the impact of economic growth on NCDs into three fundamental components: (1) a resource effect; (2) a behaviour effect; and (3) a knowledge effect. We demonstrate that each of these effects can be measured as the product of two elasticities, the output and income elasticity of the three leading factors influencing the frequency of NCDs in any population: health care, healthrelated behaviours and lifestyle, and medical knowledge
Stylized facts show there is a clustering of countries in three balanced growth paths characterized ...
For economists who study the growth theories, the most critical issues they are trying to deal with ...
This doctoral thesis is a collection of three papers that study topics related to Non-Communicable D...
Non-communicable diseases (NCDs) are currently the leading cause of death worldwide. In this paper, ...
We develop and calibrate a dynamic production function model to assess how noncommunicable diseases ...
Relationships between health and economic prosperity or economic growth are difficult to assess. The...
Relationships between health and economic prosperity or economic growth are difficult to assess. The...
There is no question that chronic non-communicable diseases (CNCDs) pose the single, greatest sus-ta...
The wealth–health relationship is not unambiguous and constant. Indeed, a higher level of wealth af...
We assess the impact of cardiovascular disease (CVD) mortality on economic growth, using a dynamic p...
Non-communicable diseases (NCDs) have large economic impact at multiple levels. To systematically re...
We introduce a theoretical framework that contributes to the understanding of the non-communicable c...
Health is one of the most important assets a human being has. It permits us to fully develop our cap...
The correlation between health and economic performance is extremely robust across communities and o...
We propose an economic theory of infectious disease transmission and rational behavior. Diseases are...
Stylized facts show there is a clustering of countries in three balanced growth paths characterized ...
For economists who study the growth theories, the most critical issues they are trying to deal with ...
This doctoral thesis is a collection of three papers that study topics related to Non-Communicable D...
Non-communicable diseases (NCDs) are currently the leading cause of death worldwide. In this paper, ...
We develop and calibrate a dynamic production function model to assess how noncommunicable diseases ...
Relationships between health and economic prosperity or economic growth are difficult to assess. The...
Relationships between health and economic prosperity or economic growth are difficult to assess. The...
There is no question that chronic non-communicable diseases (CNCDs) pose the single, greatest sus-ta...
The wealth–health relationship is not unambiguous and constant. Indeed, a higher level of wealth af...
We assess the impact of cardiovascular disease (CVD) mortality on economic growth, using a dynamic p...
Non-communicable diseases (NCDs) have large economic impact at multiple levels. To systematically re...
We introduce a theoretical framework that contributes to the understanding of the non-communicable c...
Health is one of the most important assets a human being has. It permits us to fully develop our cap...
The correlation between health and economic performance is extremely robust across communities and o...
We propose an economic theory of infectious disease transmission and rational behavior. Diseases are...
Stylized facts show there is a clustering of countries in three balanced growth paths characterized ...
For economists who study the growth theories, the most critical issues they are trying to deal with ...
This doctoral thesis is a collection of three papers that study topics related to Non-Communicable D...