The impact of aging on healthcare expenditure (HCE) has been at the center of a prolonged debate. This paper purports to shed light on several issues of this debate by presenting new evidence on the "red herring" hypothesis advanced by Zweifel, Felder and Meier (1999). This hypothesis amounts to distinguishing a mortality from a morbidity component in healthcare expenditure (HCE) and claiming that failure to make this distinction results in excessive estimates of future growth of HCE. A re-estimation based on a much larger data set is performed, using the refined econometric methodology. The main contribution is consistency, however. Rather than treating the mortality component as a residual in forecasting, its dynamics are analyzed in the ...
The red herring hypothesis contends that the high health care expenditure in old age is caused by pr...
BACKGROUND Health care expenditures (HCE) are known to steepen with increasing age, but the contr...
Studies on the effect of ageing on health care expenditures (HCE) have revealed the importance of co...
The impact of aging on healthcare expenditure (HCE) has been at the center of a prolonged debate. Th...
The impact of aging on healthcare expenditure (HCE) has been at the center of a prolonged debate. Th...
The impact of aging on healthcare expenditure (HCE) has been at the center of a prolonged debate. Th...
The impact of aging on healthcare expenditure (HCE) has been at the center of a prolonged de-bate. T...
This paper contributes to the debate about the impact of population ageing on health care expenditur...
This paper contributes to the debate about the impact of population ageing on health care expenditur...
This paper contributes to the debate about the impact of population ageing on health care expenditur...
This paper contributes to the debate about the impact of population ageing on health care expenditur...
This paper contributes to the debate about the impact of population ageing on health care expenditur...
An open issue in the economics literature is whether health care expenditure (HCE) is so concentrate...
This paper revisits the debate on the red herring, viz. the claim that population ageing will not ha...
This paper revisits the debate on the \u27red herring\u27, viz. the claim that population ageing wil...
The red herring hypothesis contends that the high health care expenditure in old age is caused by pr...
BACKGROUND Health care expenditures (HCE) are known to steepen with increasing age, but the contr...
Studies on the effect of ageing on health care expenditures (HCE) have revealed the importance of co...
The impact of aging on healthcare expenditure (HCE) has been at the center of a prolonged debate. Th...
The impact of aging on healthcare expenditure (HCE) has been at the center of a prolonged debate. Th...
The impact of aging on healthcare expenditure (HCE) has been at the center of a prolonged debate. Th...
The impact of aging on healthcare expenditure (HCE) has been at the center of a prolonged de-bate. T...
This paper contributes to the debate about the impact of population ageing on health care expenditur...
This paper contributes to the debate about the impact of population ageing on health care expenditur...
This paper contributes to the debate about the impact of population ageing on health care expenditur...
This paper contributes to the debate about the impact of population ageing on health care expenditur...
This paper contributes to the debate about the impact of population ageing on health care expenditur...
An open issue in the economics literature is whether health care expenditure (HCE) is so concentrate...
This paper revisits the debate on the red herring, viz. the claim that population ageing will not ha...
This paper revisits the debate on the \u27red herring\u27, viz. the claim that population ageing wil...
The red herring hypothesis contends that the high health care expenditure in old age is caused by pr...
BACKGROUND Health care expenditures (HCE) are known to steepen with increasing age, but the contr...
Studies on the effect of ageing on health care expenditures (HCE) have revealed the importance of co...