Moreon the Effectiveness of Public Spendingon Health Care and Education [electronic resource] : A Covariance Structure Model.

By: International Monetary FundMaterial type: TextTextSeries: IMF Working Papers; Working Paper ; No. 02/90Publication details: Washington, D.C. : International Monetary Fund, 2002Description: 1 online resource (32 p.)ISBN: 1451851405 :ISSN: 1018-5941Subject(s): Analysis of Education | Covariance Structure Models | Enrollment Rate | General Welfare | Health Care | Health Production | Bhutan | Bulgaria | Central African Republic | Iran, Islamic Republic of | Saint Vincent and the GrenadinesAdditional physical formats: Print Version:: Moreon the Effectiveness of Public Spendingon Health Care and Education : A Covariance Structure ModelOnline resources: IMF e-Library | IMF Book Store Abstract: Using data for a sample of developing and transition countries, this paper estimates the relationship between government spending on health care and education, and social indicators. Unlike previous studies, where social indicators are used as proxies for the unobservable health and education status of the population, this paper estimates a latent variable model. The findings suggest that public social spending is an important determinant of social indicators, particularly in the education sector. Overall, the latent variable approach was found to yield more adequate estimates of social production functions, with larger elasticities of social indicators with respect to income and spending on education than the traditional approach, providing stronger evidence that increases in public spending have a positive impact on social indicators. The study also finds that the millennium goal of universal primary education enrollment by 2015 could be achieved through an increase by one-third, on average, in education spending.
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Using data for a sample of developing and transition countries, this paper estimates the relationship between government spending on health care and education, and social indicators. Unlike previous studies, where social indicators are used as proxies for the unobservable health and education status of the population, this paper estimates a latent variable model. The findings suggest that public social spending is an important determinant of social indicators, particularly in the education sector. Overall, the latent variable approach was found to yield more adequate estimates of social production functions, with larger elasticities of social indicators with respect to income and spending on education than the traditional approach, providing stronger evidence that increases in public spending have a positive impact on social indicators. The study also finds that the millennium goal of universal primary education enrollment by 2015 could be achieved through an increase by one-third, on average, in education spending.

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