Top Banner
HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon Supon Limwattananon
55

HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

Jan 02, 2016

Download

Documents

Byron Stanley
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

HEFPA Paper Digest I

Supon LimwattananonSupon Limwattananon

Page 2: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

WP

2

WP

1

Page 3: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.
Page 4: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.
Page 5: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.
Page 6: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.
Page 7: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

Health shocks

- Labor supply

- Income (earned and unearned) - Medical spending

Food consumption Non-food consumption

- Health insurance

- Coping methods:

- Saving - Gift - Borrowing/loan - Asset

- Social insurance/security

- Informal solidarity

Consumption insurance

Financial risks

Page 8: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

Paper 3

Page 9: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

Which kind of insurance can protect welfare loss?

• For common minor illnesses vs. for unanticipated major illnesses

• First-dollar coverage with low capped benefits vs. catastrophic insurance with patient cost-sharing

1

1 Townsend (1995); Kochar (1995) found families in LICs were able to insure illness shocks fairly well.

Page 10: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

Objective

Page 11: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

FindingsSection III:

Section IV:

Page 12: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

Panel data

Page 13: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

Fixed-effects model

Page 14: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

(1) ADLs vs. (2) Self-reported illness symptoms

Symptom lasting > 1 mo.Any symptom

1.

2.12.21.1

1.2

mean (SD)

%

%%mean (SD)

mean (SD)

hij

Page 15: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

Problems on self-reported illnesses

Page 16: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

Lij

3.

2.

1.1

1.2

Xij

Labor supply/wk

This has to be imputed for informal sectors

per wk

(C/n)ij

Page 17: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

hij

Xij

Lij (1.1)

2.1

2.2

1.

per wk

Section III

Page 18: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

hij 2.1 2.2 1.

Lij

1.1

1.2

2.

3.

per wk

Interpretation:

Moving from being able to perform all ADLs to being able to perform none would result in

- lowering hours of work by 30.9 hours per week (84% of baseline mean hours)

- 73.8% likelihood of becoming labor-force nonparticipant

- a reduction of earnings by Rp.20,170 (~ baseline mean earnings)

- an increase in medical spending of Rp.1,180

Page 19: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

Section III

Page 20: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

Section IV: Consumption insurance

Page 21: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

ln(C/n)ij

hij

Xij

2.1

2.2

1.

Moving from being able to perform all ADLs to being able to perform none would lower consumption by 19.5%

Page 22: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

Section IV

Page 23: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

Section V: The extent to which households are able to insure consumption

Biased est.: For each Rp. that income falls, consumption falls by only 3%

Unbiased est.: For each Rp. that income falls, consumption falls by 35%

Households are able to insure only 65% of the consumption with respect to income loss due to a loss in ADL

Page 24: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

Instrument Variable (IV)

Y = 1 + 1h + Z1 + 1

C = 2 + 2 + X2 + 2

^

YPredicted Y as an instrument

Step 1. Income

Step 2. Consumption

C = 0 + 0Y + X0 + 0

OLS method

Y is endogenous: some unobserved variables affect both Y and C.

Hence, Is biased (change in Y affecting change in C is spurious).

Consumption:

IV method

Page 25: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

Paper 4

Page 26: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

Sht-1

Page 27: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

Sht-1

Page 28: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

1.1

1.21.

2.

3.1

3.2

ln yht

1.

2.12.2

3.

Sht-1

Xht

e.g., gift, remittance, pension, compensation

e.g., wage/salary, agriculture, family business

esp., direct, nonmedical costs of care

Page 29: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

yht

Page 30: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

Rural

Urban

Effects on income per household

An urban household’s earned income

is more vulnerable to death shocks

than an rural household’s.

Statistically non-significant

Regression coefficient and (t-statistics)

Statistically non-significant

An increase in unearned income

offsets a decrease in earned income;

whereby other-than death shocks in

urban area are larger than in rural area.

Page 31: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

Urban

Rural

Effects on income per capita

Effect of a death on per capita income

Is statistically non-significant and is

less than on household income.

Page 32: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

Effects on medical expenditure (1)

Urban

Rural

Page 33: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

Effects on medical expenditure (2)

Insured

Uninsured

Page 34: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

Effects on food consumption

Rural

Urban

Households cannot smooth their food consumption in the face of some health shocks!

Page 35: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

Effects on non-food/non-medical consumption

Urban

Rural

The evidence is more mixed!

Page 36: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

Pr (y>0)

E[y|y>0](Housing)

Page 37: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

Health shocks

Year 2004-05(wave 1: N = 5,673)

Year 2005-06(wave 2: N = 5,495)

% Dead: Any HH members 0% 2.3%

% Ill: Any HH members 57.0% 53.8%

% Ill: HH head 37.8% 35.1%

% Ill: Other than head 19.1% 18.7%

% Ill: Working member 43.4% 40.7%

% Hospitalized: Any HH members 21.3% NA

% Hospitalized: HH head 10.3% NA

% Hospitalized: Other than head 11.0% NA

% Hospitalized: Working member 14.7% NA

Page 38: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

Economic consequencesYear 2005-06

(wave 2)Year 2006-07

(wave 3)

Mean Unearned income (Baht) 911 992

Mean Earned income (Baht) 4,357 4,664

Mean Total income (Baht) 5,269 5,656

% Catastrophic health exp. (>10% total exp.) 3.3% 3.3%

% Positive health exp. 57.3% 51.0%

Mean Health exp. (Baht), given positive 98 104

Mean Food expenditure (Baht) 1,173 1,260

Mean Nonfood/non-health exp. (Baht) 1,867 2,186

% Positive education exp. 56.2% 55.8%

Mean Education exp. (Baht), given positive 269 289

Page 39: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

Covariates for adjustment

Year 2006 Year 2007

% Urban 29.1% 31.7%

% Rural 70.9% 68.3%

% Bangkok 15.8% 17.1%

% Central 16.9% 17.4%

% North 19.1% 19.4%

% Northeast 35.2% 35.0%

% South 12.9% 11.1%

Mean Age (years) 51.5 51.8

% Male 70.1% 70.1%

% Couple 73.9% 75.2%

% Primary educated 73.9% 71.2%

% Secondary educated 14.2% 15.2%

% Higher educated 11.8% 13.6%

Household head

Page 40: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

Effect on per capita income

Thailand –whole country

Health shock Unearned Earned Total

Dead: Any HH members 0.778 -0.333 0.053

Ill: Any HH members 0.556 0.259 0.073

Ill: HH head 0.575 0.301 0.208

Ill: Other than head 0.040 -0.027 -0.175

Ill: Working member 0.357 0.143 0.083

Hospitalized: Any HH members 0.488 0.097 0.223

Hospitalized: HH head 0.641 -0.201 0.219

Hospitalized: Other than head 0.235 0.355 0.176

Hospitalized: Working member 0.380 -0.020 0.184

Page 41: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

Effect on per capita incomeThailand –urban vs. rural

Health shock Unearned Earned Total

Dead: Any HH members 0.745 -0.943 -0.393

Hospitalized: Any HH members 0.652 -0.153 -0.037

Hospitalized: HH head 0.536 -0.438 0.017

Hospitalized: Other than head 0.617 0.142 -0.078

Hospitalized: Working member 0.280 -0.118 -0.027

Dead: Any HH members 0.751 -0.106 0.177

Hospitalized: Any HH members 0.448 0.183 0.334

Hospitalized: HH head 0.698 -0.139 0.289

Hospitalized: Other than head 0.108 0.444 0.299

Hospitalized: Working member 0.414 -0.023 0.233

Ru

ral

U

rba

n

Page 42: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

Effect on per capita health spending (W2)

Thailand –whole country

Health shock (W1)Catast.

exp.

Positive

exp.

Exp.

if positive

Overall

exp.

Ill: Any HH members 0.009 0.088 0.136 0.767

Ill: HH head 0.007 0.070 0.108 0.611

Ill: Other than head 0.004 0.034 0.046 0.302

Ill: Working member 0.011 0.089 0.135 0.775

Hospitalized: Any HH members 0.017 0.053 0.154 0.517

Hospitalized: HH head 0.017 0.052 0.208 0.528

Hospitalized: Other than head 0.014 0.042 0.066 0.390

Hospitalized: Working member 0.018 0.049 0.170 0.488

Page 43: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

Effect on per capita health spending (W2)

Thailand –urban vs. rural

Health shock (W1)Catast.

exp.

Positive

exp.

Exp.

if positive

Overall

exp.

Hospitalized: Any HH members 0.020 0.039 0.227 0.478

Hospitalized: HH head 0.026 0.024 0.306 0.407

Hospitalized: Other than head 0.009 0.044 0.107 0.439

Hospitalized: Working member 0.003 0.015 0.070 0.176

Hospitalized: Any HH members 0.017 0.058 0.130 0.530

Hospitalized: HH head 0.013 0.062 0.174 0.569

Hospitalized: Other than head 0.016 0.042 0.054 0.371

Hospitalized: Working member 0.023 0.059 0.208 0.580

Ru

ral

U

rba

n

Page 44: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

Effect on per capita health spending (W3)

Thailand –CS vs. SS vs. UC

Health shock (W2)Catast.

exp.

Positive

exp.

Exp.

if positive

Overall

exp.

Ill: Any HH members 0.024 0.122 0.210 1.092

Ill: HH head 0.0007 0.042 0.213 0.435

Ill: Any HH members 0.017 0.070 0.167 0.655

Ill: HH head 0.004 0.070 0.182 0.627

Ill: Any HH members 0.016 0.068 0.292 0.695

Ill: HH head 0.018 0.047 0.326 0.549

UC

SS

C

S

Page 45: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

Effect on per capita non-health spending

Thailand –whole country

Health shock   Food Nonfood

Dead: Any HH members -0.124 0.216

Ill: Any HH members -0.030 0.005

Ill: HH head 0.026 0.059

Ill: Other than head -0.079 -0.073

Ill: Working member -0.0004 0.062

Hospitalized: Any HH members -0.098 -0.073

Hospitalized: HH head -0.058 -0.009

Hospitalized: Other than head -0.114 -0.116

Hospitalized: Working member -0.080 0.005

Page 46: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

Effect on per capita non-health spending

Thailand –urban vs. rural

Health shock Food Nonfood

Dead: Any HH members -0.115 -0.324

Hospitalized: Any HH members -0.104 -0.215

Hospitalized: HH head 0.024 -0.099

Hospitalized: Other than head -0.198 -0.275

Hospitalized: Working member -0.032 -0.083

Dead: Any HH members -0.120 0.415

Hospitalized: Any HH members -0.100 -0.026

Hospitalized: HH head -0.090 0.017

Hospitalized: Other than head -0.086 -0.060

Hospitalized: Working member -0.099 0.029

Ru

ral

U

rba

n

Page 47: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

Effect on per capita education spending

Thailand –whole country

Health shockPositive

exp.

Exp.

if positive

Overall

exp.

Dead: Any HH members -0.043 -0.164 -0.432

Ill: Any HH members -0.026 0.028 -0.214

Ill: HH head -0.036 0.057 -0.304

Ill: Other than head 0.012 -0.029 0.098

Ill: Working member -0.057 0.062 -0.465

Hospitalized: Any HH members -0.024 -0.057 -0.248

Hospitalized: HH head -0.026 0.063 -0.198

Hospitalized: Other than head -0.017 -0.144 -0.239

Hospitalized: Working member -0.048 0.070 -0.385

Page 48: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

Effect on per capita education spending

Thailand –urban vs. rural

Health shockPositive

exp.

Exp.

if positive

Overall

exp.

Dead: Any HH members -0.045 -0.426 -0.608

Hospitalized: Any HH members -0.073 -0.318 -0.832

Hospitalized: HH head -0.058 -0.236 -0.614

Hospitalized: Other than head -0.072 -0.331 -0.852

Hospitalized: Working member -0.098 -0.149 -0.991

Dead: Any HH members -0.039 -0.109 -0.345

Hospitalized: Any HH members -0.007 0.020 -0.037

Hospitalized: HH head -0.014 0.147 -0.052

Hospitalized: Other than head 0.002 -0.089 -0.015

Hospitalized: Working member -0.029 0.129 -0.166

Ru

ral

U

rba

n

Page 49: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

VHLSS (Vietnam Household Living Standards Survey)

Coping Strategies

Source: VHLSS 2006 Report

Page 50: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

Paper 5

Page 51: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

(coping strategies)C = 2,580/2,760 = 0.93

Mean of proportion of exp. financed by coping

Coping-adjusted health expenditure ratio (P)(High spending households)

P

= unadjusted

C

Page 52: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.

Cumulative distributions of health expenditure ratiosw = Unadjusted; P = Coping-adjusted

(w)

(P)

Page 53: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.
Page 54: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.
Page 55: HEFPA Paper Digest I Supon Limwattananon. WP2 WP1.