Diseases, infection dynamics and development
- Shankha Chakraborty 1
- Chris Papageorgiou 2
- Fidel Pérez Sebastián 3
- 1 University of Oregon
- 2 International Monetary Fund
-
3
Universitat d'Alacant
info
Año de publicación: 2010
Número: 28
Páginas: 1-33
Tipo: Documento de Trabajo
Resumen
We propose an economic theory of infectious disease transmission and rational behavior. Diseases are costly due to mortality (premature death) and morbidity (lower productivity and quality of life). The theory offers three main insights. First, higher disease prevalence implies lower saving-investment propensity. Preventive behavior can partially offset this when the prevalence rate and negative disease externality are relatively low. Secondly, infectious diseases can generate a low-growth trap where income alone cannot push an economy out of underdevelopment, a result that differs from development traps in the existing literature. Since income per se does not cause health in this equilibrium, successful interventions have to be health specific. Thirdly, a more favorable disease ecology propels the economy to a higher growth path where infectious diseases are eradicated. Even so, diseases can significantly slow down convergence to this growth path. Taken together, our results suggest that the empirical relationship between health and income at the aggregate level may be more nuanced than realized.