Education and health: welfare state composition and growth across country groups

When analysing the Welfare State-economic growth nexus, the importance of health and education expenditures and their impact on human capital accumulation is often neglected. In this study, we claim that the Welfare State composition matters for growth, making it necessary to assess the impact of ed...

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Main Authors: João A. S. ANDRADE, Adelaide P. S. DUARTE, Marta C. N. SIMÕES
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Alexandru Ioan Cuza University of Iasi 2018-11-01
Series:Eastern Journal of European Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ejes.uaic.ro/articles/EJES2018_0902_AND.pdf
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spelling doaj-8b51e9567fdc462da60d72e69327f5092020-11-25T02:12:26ZengAlexandru Ioan Cuza University of IasiEastern Journal of European Studies2068-651X2068-66332018-11-0192111144Education and health: welfare state composition and growth across country groupsJoão A. S. ANDRADE0Adelaide P. S. DUARTE1Marta C. N. SIMÕES2University of Coimbra, PortugalUniversity of Coimbra, PortugalUniversity of Coimbra, PortugalWhen analysing the Welfare State-economic growth nexus, the importance of health and education expenditures and their impact on human capital accumulation is often neglected. In this study, we claim that the Welfare State composition matters for growth, making it necessary to assess the impact of education and health (public) expenditures on educational attainment and health status, as well as their effect on the real output across countries. To better account for the influence of differences across countries we consider three groups over the period 1960-2012: high income (non-EU) OECD countries, the EU member states before the 2004 enlargement and the EU enlargement (2004 and 2007) new member states. The contribution of the study is twofold. First, we identify long-run relationships for the main variables using the DOLS estimator corrected for cross-sectional dependence. Secondly, we estimate short-run relationships that include an ECM term from the associated long-run equation by applying fixed effects and pooled mean group estimators and identify the direction of causality. The results of the estimation of the long-run equilibrium relationships point to a positive, direct or indirect, influence of (public) education expenditures and (public, private or total) health expenditures on the output in all the groups. However, causality analysis presented mixed results concerning our policy variables, education and health expenditures, within and between country groups. These results can have important implications for Welfare State policy design in the EU and its OECD partners. For the high-income OECD (non EU) group, the results unequivocally support the use of social policy variables as a means to foster economic growth. However, for both EU country groups, educational and health expenditures react to disequilibrium relative to the long-run equilibrium path, so that they are endogenously determined with output, which undermines their use as growth enhancing policies.http://ejes.uaic.ro/articles/EJES2018_0902_AND.pdfeducationhealthpublic expenditureseconomic growthOECD
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author João A. S. ANDRADE
Adelaide P. S. DUARTE
Marta C. N. SIMÕES
spellingShingle João A. S. ANDRADE
Adelaide P. S. DUARTE
Marta C. N. SIMÕES
Education and health: welfare state composition and growth across country groups
Eastern Journal of European Studies
education
health
public expenditures
economic growth
OECD
author_facet João A. S. ANDRADE
Adelaide P. S. DUARTE
Marta C. N. SIMÕES
author_sort João A. S. ANDRADE
title Education and health: welfare state composition and growth across country groups
title_short Education and health: welfare state composition and growth across country groups
title_full Education and health: welfare state composition and growth across country groups
title_fullStr Education and health: welfare state composition and growth across country groups
title_full_unstemmed Education and health: welfare state composition and growth across country groups
title_sort education and health: welfare state composition and growth across country groups
publisher Alexandru Ioan Cuza University of Iasi
series Eastern Journal of European Studies
issn 2068-651X
2068-6633
publishDate 2018-11-01
description When analysing the Welfare State-economic growth nexus, the importance of health and education expenditures and their impact on human capital accumulation is often neglected. In this study, we claim that the Welfare State composition matters for growth, making it necessary to assess the impact of education and health (public) expenditures on educational attainment and health status, as well as their effect on the real output across countries. To better account for the influence of differences across countries we consider three groups over the period 1960-2012: high income (non-EU) OECD countries, the EU member states before the 2004 enlargement and the EU enlargement (2004 and 2007) new member states. The contribution of the study is twofold. First, we identify long-run relationships for the main variables using the DOLS estimator corrected for cross-sectional dependence. Secondly, we estimate short-run relationships that include an ECM term from the associated long-run equation by applying fixed effects and pooled mean group estimators and identify the direction of causality. The results of the estimation of the long-run equilibrium relationships point to a positive, direct or indirect, influence of (public) education expenditures and (public, private or total) health expenditures on the output in all the groups. However, causality analysis presented mixed results concerning our policy variables, education and health expenditures, within and between country groups. These results can have important implications for Welfare State policy design in the EU and its OECD partners. For the high-income OECD (non EU) group, the results unequivocally support the use of social policy variables as a means to foster economic growth. However, for both EU country groups, educational and health expenditures react to disequilibrium relative to the long-run equilibrium path, so that they are endogenously determined with output, which undermines their use as growth enhancing policies.
topic education
health
public expenditures
economic growth
OECD
url http://ejes.uaic.ro/articles/EJES2018_0902_AND.pdf
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