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Expenditure Responses to Adverse Health Shocks: Evidence from a Panel of Colombian Households

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  • Cortes, Darwin
  • Gallegos, Andrés
  • Perez Perez, Jorge

Abstract

We analyze the effect of adverse health shocks on households’ expenditure shares in different good categories using a fixed-effects approach and a structural approach based on microeconomic theory. We find that households substitute health and food expenditure in response to adverse health shocks. We find substantial heterogeneity in this trade-off between current and future health mediated by access to social protection, job contract type, and location (urban-rural). Households from rural areas –where household heads are more likely to hold informal jobs and lack access to safety nets– are more vulnerable than others. Our findings suggest that access to formal employment and a higher quality of local institutions can help mitigate the negative consequences of health shocks.

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  • Cortes, Darwin & Gallegos, Andrés & Perez Perez, Jorge, 2021. "Expenditure Responses to Adverse Health Shocks: Evidence from a Panel of Colombian Households," SocArXiv vh2qa_v1, Center for Open Science.
  • Handle: RePEc:osf:socarx:vh2qa_v1
    DOI: 10.31219/osf.io/vh2qa_v1
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    1. Robert Sparrow & Ellen Van de Poel & Gracia Hadiwidjaja & Athia Yumna & Nila Warda & Asep Suryahadi, 2014. "Coping With The Economic Consequences Of Ill Health In Indonesia," Health Economics, John Wiley & Sons, Ltd., vol. 23(6), pages 719-728, June.
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