应用经济学报告系列 (1213-2)
Topic:Public-Private Mix of Health Expenditure: A Political Economy and Quantitative Analysis
Speaker:Shuyun May Li
Affiliation: University of Melbourn, Australia
Time:2:00-3:30pm, October 9
Location:Room 217, Guanghua New Building
Paper: Download PDF
Abstract: This paper constructs a simple overlapping generations model to examine how the choice of public and private health expenditure is affected by preferences and economic factors under majority voting. In the model, agents with heterogeneous income decide how much to consume, save, and invest in private health care, and vote for the income tax to be used to finance public health. Agents’ survival probabilities are endogenously determined by a CES composite of public and private health expenditure. For the two special cases that public and private health are complements or perfect substitutes, we show that the voting equilibrium is unique and locally stable. For the general case, we calibrate the model to Canadian data to conduct a quantitative analysis. Our results suggest that the public-private mix of health expenditure is quite sensitive to the degree of substitutability between private and public health and the relative effectiveness of public and private health. Using a sample of advanced democratic countries, we further infer these two parameters and construct the shares of public health in total health expenditure for each country, and find that the predicted values match the data quite well.
Speaker’s bio: Dr. Shuyun Li got her Bachelor degree in Applied Mathematics in 1994 and Master degree in Quantitative Economics in 1997 at RenMin University of China. In 1999 she went to the University of Texas at Austin to study Economics and got her Ph.D. degree in 2005. Since then she has been working at the University of Melbourne, and was tenured in 2010. She has published on Economic Inquiry, Macroeconomic Dynamics, B.E. Journal of Macroeconomics (contributions), and etc.