An Econometric Analysis of the US Health Care Expenditure


  •  Amaresh Das    
  •  Frank Martin    

Abstract

This paper estimates the determinants of aggregate health care expenditure function for the U.S. by applying a co
integration test on a time series data. The evidence presented in the paper supports co integration. The paper
lends support to the view that per capita income is the major determinant of aggregate health care expenditure in
the U. S. Age of the population, the number of practicing doctors and the share of public finance do not
contribute significantly to the explanation of the health care spending. The main policy recommendation that can
be drawn from the results is that the health expenditure policy should be coupled not necessarily with the
increase in the supply of physicians or policies that promote competition but, with long-run policies that promote
human capital. We also find that the mixture of public-private funding does not contribute significantly to the
explanation of the health care expenditure in the U.S.


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