COVID-19 mortality and health expenditures across European countries: the positive correlation puzzle
Serge Blondel and
Radu Vranceanu
Working Papers from HAL
Abstract:
The positive correlation between health share expenditures and COVID-19 case fatalities in a cross-section of 31 European countries is puzzling. The positive relationships is also detected in weighted OLS and IV models that control for many usual suspects of the COVID-19 mortality: (1) health indicators (personal risk factors, medical resources), (2) virus ease of circulation, (3) macroeconomic variables related to the economic development and social orientation of the country. COVID-19 case fatalities are lower in countries with significant resources dedicated to health care (hospital beds and medical doctors); the contribution of virus circulation factors is less significant. Policy implications follow.
Keywords: COVID-19; health care systems; Europe; efficiency; mortality; health policy (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2020-08-24
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-eur and nep-hea
Note: View the original document on HAL open archive server: https://essec.hal.science/hal-02920258v2
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Related works:
Working Paper: COVID-19 mortality and health expenditures across European countries: The positive correlation puzzle (2021) 
Working Paper: COVID-19 mortality and health expenditures across European countries: The positive correlation puzzle (2020) 
Working Paper: COVID-19 mortality and health expenditures across European countries:The positive correlation puzzle (2020) 
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