Type | Journal Article - Asian Development Review |
Title | Inclusiveness of economic growth in the People's Republic of China: what do population health outcomes tell us? |
Author(s) | |
Volume | 23 |
Issue | 2 |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2006 |
URL | https://openaccess.adb.org/bitstream/handle/11540/1452/pb047.pdf?sequence=1 |
Abstract | This policy brief looks at inclusiveness of economic growth in the People’s Republic of China (PRC) from the perspective of population health outcomes. Health is a key dimension of human welfare and an intrinsic goal of development, this being reflected in the prominence of health among the Millennium Development Goals. The distribution of health outcomes is a key indicator of the inclusiveness of economic growth in a country (see, for example, Sen 1998). Arguably, levels and distribution in health outcomes can also serve as proxies for the concern a government has for all its citizens, and for the extent to which a government is pro-poor. Population health outcomes and their distribution are now an important focus of the PRC government’s strategy toward a harmonious society, as reflected in its 11th Five Year Plan. This policy brief specifically asks two questions. Firstly, has spectacular economic growth in the PRC over the past three decades been accompanied by similar achievements in improving population health outcomes? And, secondly, how inclusive have the improvements in health outcomes in the PRC been? To answer the first question, we relate the PRC’s life expectancy to its per capita income and examine how this relationship has changed during the postreform period compared to the prereform period. We also compare improvements in health outcomes in the PRC with those of some of its regional peers. To assess the inclusiveness of improvements in population health outcomes, we use both provincial- and household-level data to examine interprovincial and interhousehold inequality in health outcomes and health care coverage. |
» | China - World Health Survey 2003 |