The Asymmetric Impact of Health Expenditure, Bottom Decile Income, and Trade Openness on BRICS Health Indicators

Amid growing concerns about widening health inequities and the complex interaction of socioeconomic determinants, the problem of improving health outcomes in emerging economies—particularly within BRICS nations—has become ever more significant. This research delves into the impact of health expendi...

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Main Authors: Дхиани Мехта, Валентина Валерьевна Дербенева
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Russian Academy of Sciences, Institute of Economics of the Ural Branch 2025-06-01
Series:Экономика региона
Subjects:
Online Access:https://economyofregions.org/ojs/index.php/er/article/view/997
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author Дхиани Мехта
Валентина Валерьевна Дербенева
author_facet Дхиани Мехта
Валентина Валерьевна Дербенева
author_sort Дхиани Мехта
collection DOAJ
description Amid growing concerns about widening health inequities and the complex interaction of socioeconomic determinants, the problem of improving health outcomes in emerging economies—particularly within BRICS nations—has become ever more significant. This research delves into the impact of health expenditure, trade openness, and income distribution on health indicators such as infant mortality rate (IMR), life expectancy (LE), and crude death rate (CDR) in BRICS, including Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa. The study uses annual time series panel data from 2000 to 2023 and applies the cross-sectional asymmetric autoregressive distributed lag (CS-NARDL) model to examine these relationships. The findings reveal that an increase in health spending leads to reductions in mortality and death rates, while reduced spending has a more pronounced (negative) effect on health indicators. Moreover, the study highlights the organic improvement in health indicators observed in open economies, as they benefit from the exchange of advanced health technology and services. The results indicate that an increase in income among the poorest households in the lowest quartile of income distribution enhances their access to health services, thereby leading to improved health indicators. This study contributes to the existing literature on the impact of health expenditure and income distribution on health indicators. Governments should establish mechanisms to evaluate the effectiveness of healthcare spending on health outcomes, enabling them to improve their healthcare policies and programs.
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language English
publishDate 2025-06-01
publisher Russian Academy of Sciences, Institute of Economics of the Ural Branch
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spelling doaj-art-8e92eaefa13f4b58b0dbef11fe89b7c22025-08-20T03:33:17ZengRussian Academy of Sciences, Institute of Economics of the Ural BranchЭкономика региона2072-64142411-14062025-06-0121210.17059/ekon.reg.2025-2-10The Asymmetric Impact of Health Expenditure, Bottom Decile Income, and Trade Openness on BRICS Health IndicatorsДхиани Мехта 0Валентина Валерьевна Дербенева 1Pandit Deendayal Energy UniversityUral Federal University named the first President of Russia B.N. Yeltsin Amid growing concerns about widening health inequities and the complex interaction of socioeconomic determinants, the problem of improving health outcomes in emerging economies—particularly within BRICS nations—has become ever more significant. This research delves into the impact of health expenditure, trade openness, and income distribution on health indicators such as infant mortality rate (IMR), life expectancy (LE), and crude death rate (CDR) in BRICS, including Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa. The study uses annual time series panel data from 2000 to 2023 and applies the cross-sectional asymmetric autoregressive distributed lag (CS-NARDL) model to examine these relationships. The findings reveal that an increase in health spending leads to reductions in mortality and death rates, while reduced spending has a more pronounced (negative) effect on health indicators. Moreover, the study highlights the organic improvement in health indicators observed in open economies, as they benefit from the exchange of advanced health technology and services. The results indicate that an increase in income among the poorest households in the lowest quartile of income distribution enhances their access to health services, thereby leading to improved health indicators. This study contributes to the existing literature on the impact of health expenditure and income distribution on health indicators. Governments should establish mechanisms to evaluate the effectiveness of healthcare spending on health outcomes, enabling them to improve their healthcare policies and programs. https://economyofregions.org/ojs/index.php/er/article/view/997health indicators, health expenditure, IMR, life expectancy, crude death rate, trade openness
spellingShingle Дхиани Мехта
Валентина Валерьевна Дербенева
The Asymmetric Impact of Health Expenditure, Bottom Decile Income, and Trade Openness on BRICS Health Indicators
Экономика региона
health indicators, health expenditure, IMR, life expectancy, crude death rate, trade openness
title The Asymmetric Impact of Health Expenditure, Bottom Decile Income, and Trade Openness on BRICS Health Indicators
title_full The Asymmetric Impact of Health Expenditure, Bottom Decile Income, and Trade Openness on BRICS Health Indicators
title_fullStr The Asymmetric Impact of Health Expenditure, Bottom Decile Income, and Trade Openness on BRICS Health Indicators
title_full_unstemmed The Asymmetric Impact of Health Expenditure, Bottom Decile Income, and Trade Openness on BRICS Health Indicators
title_short The Asymmetric Impact of Health Expenditure, Bottom Decile Income, and Trade Openness on BRICS Health Indicators
title_sort asymmetric impact of health expenditure bottom decile income and trade openness on brics health indicators
topic health indicators, health expenditure, IMR, life expectancy, crude death rate, trade openness
url https://economyofregions.org/ojs/index.php/er/article/view/997
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