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The Social Value of Health Insurance: Results from Ghana

Sílvia Garcia‐Mandicó, Arndt Reichert, Christoph Strupat

2020Journal of Public Economics30 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

We use the roll-out of the national health insurance in Ghana to assess the cushioning effect of coverage on the financial consequences of health shocks and resulting changes in coping behaviors. We find a strong reduction in medical expenditures, preventing households from cutting non-food consumption and causing a decrease in the volume of received remittances as well as labor supply of healthy adult household members. Moreover, we present evidence that the insurance scheme reduced the likelihood that households experiencing a health shock pulled their children out of school in order to put them to work. Avoidance of such costly coping mechanisms is potentially an important part of the social value of formal health insurance.

Topics & Concepts

Shock (circulatory)Coping (psychology)Social determinants of healthEconomicsConsumption (sociology)Health insuranceSocial insuranceBusinessDemographic economicsPublic economicsHealth careEconomic growthMedicineSociologyPsychiatryInternal medicineMarket economySocial scienceAgricultural risk and resiliencePoverty, Education, and Child WelfareHealthcare Systems and Reforms
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